Pubdate: Mon, 03 Jan 2005 Source: Virginian-Pilot (VA) Copyright: 2005, The Virginian-Pilot Contact: http://www.pilotonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/483 TEENS ACTING SMART, NOT UP Something startling is happening among the nation's teenagers. For decades maligned and mistrusted, it turns out that they are increasingly making wiser choices on how to live their lives. Early in December, a federal study showed that drug use and smoking fell in 2004, most markedly among younger teens. Another study, according to a story in Knight Ridder Newspapers, showed that American teenagers are waiting longer to have sex, and most who do are using contraception. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the birth rate among teens fell by 38 percent between 1990 and 2002. Even so, 47 percent of high school students acknowledged having sex, though that's down from 54 percent a decade before. In 1979, 60 percent of seniors said they used marijuana. In 1992, that figure was 32 percent, the low ebb. In 2003, after declining for two years, the figure stood at 46 percent. Use of "ecstasy" -- a party drug with increasingly publicized dangers -- has fallen precipitously. Though the numbers of teenagers engaging in risky behavior remains alarmingly high, public health officials are increasingly cheered by the trend. They cite a variety of reasons for it, including slick commercials that educate teens on the consequences of drugs and cigarettes and sex. There's also the possibility that today's hyper-busy children -- raised by peripatetic parents -- have no time to waste. Perhaps the most hopeful reason is one embedded in the generation gap between today's teens and today's parents, those party-children of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. When they were young, today's parents engaged in precisely the same kinds of risky behavior available to their children, to the dismay of their own parents, and despite plenty of unheeded calls to reform. Perhaps because of their own hard, dangerous lessons, and because of their exposure to all the messages that didn't work, today's parents have an easier time doing something their folks found difficult: getting their children to listen. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth