Pubdate: Mon, 31 Jul 2006 Source: Star Press, The (IN) Copyright: 2006 The Star Press Contact: http://www.thestarpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1925 Author: Staci Hupp, The Indianapolis Star Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) HOOSIER TEENS SHOOTING UP DRUGS AT RECORD RATES Rate Increased By 25 Percent In One Year, According To Survey The number of Indiana high school seniors who say they have shot up heroin, methamphetamine and other drugs has hit an all-time high, according to new Indiana University findings that are backed by drug counselors. About 2.2 percent of 12th-graders surveyed by IU's Indiana Prevention Resource Center this spring admitted trying intravenous drugs, which users turn to for a more powerful high. That's an increase of more than 25 percent from a year ago, according to the 16th annual IU survey, to be released today. While the overall head count of reported IV drug users is small, it shows "there is a subgroup of schoolchildren that are heavily into drug use," said Barbara Seitz De Martinez, the center's deputy director. "If they are using heroin and other injection drugs, you don't start off with that. You graduate to that over a period of time." IV drug use has been linked primarily to older adults, but drug counselors say more teenage addicts are showing up in clinics. Larry Henry estimates about 20 percent of his young patients at Fairbanks drug treatment center in Indianapolis are addicted to IV heroin, cocaine or OxyContin. The children, who come from all walks of life, find drug suppliers in urban areas and on college campuses, Henry and others believe. "I had a kid from Pittsboro, Indiana, using heroin every day," Henry said. "Where do you find heroin in Pittsboro, Indiana?" They also have noticed that drug education in schools doesn't include much about IV drugs, the use of which is a primary way to transmit HIV. Drug prevention efforts in schools and communities over time have stepped up to include, for example, random testing of teenagers. But the efforts primarily zero in on cigarettes, alcohol and marijuana. "We began to see some decreases" in those areas, said Carolyn Snyder, a Crawfordsville nurse who heads the Indiana Association of School Nurses. "The problem is, students find other drugs. We're finding differences in drugs of choice, so that's a real problem." When Santina Sullivan was growing up, there was only one real drug of choice: marijuana. Now that the Indianapolis woman's daughter is ready to begin her freshman year at IU, Sullivan is surprised to hear about harder drugs such as heroin in high schools and colleges. "That seems like a really hard-core, addictive, terrible thing you'd see in a really bad neighborhood," Sullivan said. "It's hard for me to think about an upper-class kid with a needle in their hands." For its findings, the IU center surveyed more than 131,000 students in Grades 6-12. Children in about a quarter of Indiana public and private schools participated, although researchers did not identify them. Money from the federal Health and Human Services Department foots the survey's bill. IU researchers did not attempt to analyze the survey findings, which are instead used to shape state and local drug prevention efforts. "I don't know why children are injecting," Seitz De Martinez said. "This is a good wake-up call to let us know to what extent we still need to be on top of these issues like HIV and drug use in general." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman