Pubdate: Mon, 23 Feb 2004 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2004 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.the-times.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) LEADING ARTICLE: DRUGS-TESTING: THE ENEMY WITHIN Drugs-Testing Will Help Some Schools When more than a third of all 15-year-olds have used drugs in the past year, according to a Department of Health study, it is clear that parents and teachers have too few weapons against an enemy that is largely invisible. The Government's decision to let heads introduce random drug-testing for children aged 14 and over will be a welcome addition to schools' limited armoury. Not all will wish to make use of what are effectively police powers to take urine samples from pupils and to use dogs to sniff out drugs. But it must be right in principle to let head teachers decide both whether to test and what to do with the results. Random testing should deter some pupils, and stiffen the resolve of others to resist peer pressure. The Government's thinking has been inspired by the American experience. In his latest State of the Union speech, George Bush cited an 11 per cent drop in drug use among high-school students over the past two years, and gave student drug testing much of the credit. Yet that is probably overstating the case. Last year's federally funded study of 76,000 students and 891 schools by the University of Michigan found no significant difference in rates of drug use between schools that had drug-testing programmes and those that did not. Among twelfth graders, for example, 37 per cent reported having smoked cannabis at schools that tested, while 36 per cent reported doing so at schools that did not. Twenty-one per cent reported having used other drugs at schools that tested; 19 per cent reported doing so at schools that did not. The experiment is, nevertheless, still in its infancy. Only 5 per cent of American schools test students randomly for drugs. Almost 20 per cent test pupils who engage in sport or extra-curricular activities, but in some cases this seems to have deterred pupils from participating in healthy activities rather than from using the decidedly unhealthy drugs. Testing is inevitably controversial because it is intrusive. In America, students must be observed by a teacher or another adult as they urinate to make sure that the sample is their own - which can be especially embarrassing for adolescents. Some American teachers are concerned that testing distorts the trust between teacher and pupil that should, in an ideal world, be the best means of discouraging drug use in school. Similar concerns have been echoed by some British teacher unions, although the National Association of Head Teachers has broadly welcomed the move. Sadly, the statistics make it clear that trust and respect are no longer enough to combat the pushers. And new research, published in The Times last month, suggests that the use of cannabis, especially the concentrated skunk variety, is more likely to create profound mental health problems when started at a young age. The health risks are very real, and they are growing. It would, of course, be quite wrong for testing to create a false sense of security. While it can usefully detect a fraction of users, it will inevitably miss some of those who are in real trouble. Whereas marijuana can take weeks to disappear from the body, for example, ecstasy and alcohol disappear within hours. Parents and teachers need to pay careful attention to other signs such as truancy, erratic behaviour and falling grades. The fact is that youngsters who are most at risk of substance abuse are more likely to be playing truant from school. Drugs-testing powers must clearly be handled extremely carefully. Head teachers will be the best judges of what their particular situation requires. But like it or not, drugs are already forcing responsible teachers and parents into closer scrutiny of children. Testing, sadly, is a logical extension of that responsibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom