Pubdate: Fri, 11 Mar 2005 Source: Eagle-Tribune, The (MA) Copyright: 2005 The Eagle-Tribune Contact: http://www.eagletribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/129 Author: Shawn Regan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) MORE TEENS USING DRUGS, SURVEY SAYS HAVERHILL -- More city teens are saying they have used hard drugs -- cocaine, heroin, LSD or ecstasy -- at least once in the last month, according to a survey of high-schoolers released yesterday. But Essex County District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett said the way to fight the teen drug problem is not to subject students to random drug testing as has been proposed by School Committeeman Scott Wood. Blodgett said education is the key. "I don't see drug testing as being the solution," Blodgett said. Wood proposed random or suspicion-based drug testing of students, in part because of the results of last year's survey showing increase in drug use. A task force made up of educators, officials and parents is now discussing ways to combat drug use including drug testing. This year's increase showed 19 percent of students surveyed -- or about one in five -- had tried a hard drug in their life, up from 15 percent in 2002 and 17 percent in 2003. Thirteen percent said they had used one of those drugs in the previous 30 days -- up from 8 percent in 2002 and 9 percent in 2003. Rather than testing, Blodgett said he advocates a program to educate young people on the dangers of drug addiction, including kids as young as 10 and 11. "And to make them understand that (the prescription painkiller) OxyContin, heroin and other opiates ... it's just not the way to go." Dr. Patricia B. Cronin of the North Essex Prevention Coalition, who oversaw administering of the survey at the high school, agrees. She blamed the rise in reported drug use on deep cuts in health and educational programs that began around 2002. "In the last two years we have lost almost all of our money for programs in the middle schools and for programs that allowed us to work with the Police Department and with community groups like Community Action," she told the School Committee last night. "The result is that we are seeing a lot of our data inching up." The voluntary survey is given to high school and seventh-grade students in their homerooms. A total of 1,079 high-schoolers and 488 seventh-graders completed it. About 75 percent of kids who were in school the day the test was administered took it, representing about 63 percent of the high school class. Besides hard-drug use, the survey also asks whether the student has used marijuana, cigarettes, over-the-counter medicines or sniffed household products to get high. "Medicines are the next drug of choice among young people," she said. "Inhalants are found in the garage and under the kitchen sink, and medicines are in every home's medicine cabinet." Cronin said the survey asks about alcohol, illegal drug and tobacco use, peer influence, perceived parental response to use, traffic-safety behaviors, violence including fighting and vandalism, gambling, harassment and date violence. Of all the categories, Cronin said she was most concerned with an increase in the number of students who reported they had ridden in an automobile with another student who was drinking alcohol. Cronin characterized the results as conservative because the kids who declined to take the survey or who were not in school when it was given are those who are the most likely to be engaging in negative behaviors, she said. The margin of error on the survey is plus or minus 2.5 percent, she said. Last night, the School Committee directed administrators to develop a new plan for addressing the survey results, focusing on regular mailings to parents about drug and alcohol issues, adding education programs at the middle schools, bringing guest speakers in to talk to students and planning special after-school events. Officials said they will put the survey into a brochure and send it to parents of all high school and middle school students over the next few weeks. About the survey Haverhill's high school and seventh-grade students took the voluntary survey in their homerooms. A total of 1,079 high-schoolers and 488 seventh-graders completed it. About 75 percent of students who were in school the day the test was administered took it, representing about 63 percent of the high school population. It showed: r 19 percent of high school students, or about one in five, reported they have used a hard drug such as cocaine, heroin, LSD or ecstasy at least once in their lives -- up from 15 percent in 2002 and 17 percent in 2003. r 13 percent said they had used one of those drugs in the previous 30 days -- up from 8 percent in 2002 and 9 percent in 2003. - - Number of students who said they rode in an automobile with a fellow student who had been drinking alcohol increased from 19 percent in 2003 to 24 percent in 2004. - - The largest jump in drug use among high school students over the pervious year was in the category of inhalants -- common household aerosol products sniffed to get high. Seventeen percent of high-schoolers said they used an inhalant in their lifetime, up from 13 percent in 2003. Twelve percent said they had used an inhalant in the last month, up from 7 percent in 2003. r Another big jump was in the use of medicines such as cough suppressants and allergy medicine or a combination of the two to get high. Sixteen percent of high-schoolers reported they used medicines to get high, up from 13 percent in 2003 and 12 percent in 2002. - - Alcohol remains the most commonly used substance by Haverhill teens, just as it is in Massachusetts and the country. Two of five high-schoolers reported they drank alcohol at least once in the previous 30 days, and nine of 10 said they drank until they were drunk. - - Almost half of high-schoolers, 46 percent, said they have smoked marijuana in their lifetime, down from 49 percent in 2003. One in four high-schoolers said they smoked pot in the preceding month. - - Cigarette and cigar smoking was up in both the lifetime and previous-30-day categories for both high school and seventh-grade students. r Fighting and intentional property damage declined among Haverhill high-schoolers, with levels well below state averages. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin