Pubdate: Tue, 29 Aug 2006 Source: Liverpool Daily Post (UK) Copyright: 2006 Liverpool Daily Post Contact: http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3205 Author: David Higgerson, Daily Post Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SHOULD SCHOOL PUPILS BE TESTED FOR DRUGS? Five Merseyside Schools Are Poised To Begin Random Drugs Tests. David Higgerson Considers The Controversial Plan HUNDREDS of school-children face the prospect of being randomly screened for drugs next term. Northumbrian-based firm Preventx revealed it had started supplying five schools in this area with its kits. It follows on from trials elsewhere in the country, which have been criticised by some for infringing on the civil liberties of youngsters. Charity Drugscope is among critics. A spokesman said: "Testing risks driving drug use further underground, and could result in an increase in truancies and exclusions. "There is no room for complacency, but it is important to acknowledge that the use of hard drugs among young people has fallen significantly since the 1990s, and the majority do not use drugs at all. We do not accept that testing pupils as young as 11 is a proportionate response to general concerns about drug use." The Joseph Rowntree Foundation, which monitors social trends, concluded that there was not yet enough evidence to determine the impact of such tests. But that may soon change. In Kent, 103 schools are trying out drug-testing of up to 20 pupils each a week as part of a scheme supporting by the Department for Education and Skills. And it appears the Government supports the idea of such tests. Prime Minister Tony Blair has given his backing in the past, and the Government's own advisor on the issue believes such tests will soon be commonplace. Peter Walker, a former headteacher whose school pioneered such tests, said: "If it's properly evaluated in a positive way, it will clearly be a model to be rolled out across the United Kingdom." Today, the Daily Post asks: Should school pupils be tested for drugs? THE CASE FOR The Intention Is To Help Before It Is Too Late YES says Tom Fotheringham, Managing Director Preventx PREVENTX has seen significant growth of sales to schools around the country. We supply a high percentage of our testing kits to public schools, but due to budget constraints, state schools sometimes cannot afford them. This has been helped by former education secretary Ruth Kelly clearing the way for random drug testing of pupils. She claimed one pilot scheme had been a "hugely effective" tool in tackling substance abuse. Ms Kelly told a teachers' conference in Birmingham that she had an "open mind" about extending the system nationwide. One school Preventx supplies is Abbey School in Faversham, Kent, which screened 20 pupils a week at random. Oral mouth saliva swabs are taken and samples checked for traces of cannabis, cocaine and ecstasy. GCSE results leapt significantly last year after the scheme was introduced. Statistics show that one in five schools will have to deal with illegal drug use each year. As much as we would like to believe that very few young people experiment with drugs, the available data suggests otherwise. Tony Blair's recent backing of drug testing in state schools could significantly reduce substance abuse among school children. Head teachers are now allowed to randomly test pupils suspected of taking drugs as part of a drive to curb drug abuse among teenagers. The intention of drug testing isn't to shame pupils, but to give help and assistance before it's too late. If usage is detected early enough, support and counselling can be provided to show the potential harm they are doing to themselves and their loved ones. More importantly, random testing also works as a deterrent from even trying drugs in the first place. The knowledge that a school uses random testing will help teenagers resist peer pressure to experiment. Many teenagers don't have an answer to coercive peer pressure, but the real possibility of testing positive gives pupils an ideal reason to say no. Students who may in the past have thought "well, what's the harm in just trying it' would now have to consider the consequences of a positive test. Preventx likes to see no child tested against his or her wishes, but if a pupil refuses their parents should be invited into school to discuss the issue. Children who test positive should not be expelled but can receive counselling. However, any pupil who is found to be selling drugs should be expelled. Preventx believe school drug testing policies can identify these types of problems before it is too late. THE CASE AGAINST This Plan Will Cost Too Much And Won't Work NO Dr John Whittaker, Euro MP for the UK Independence Party. THE news that four schools in Liverpool and one on the Wirral will be introducing random drug tests at the start of the new school year raises a number of troubling questions. Of course, all of us want our schools to have a healthy, safe environment, where children can learn and play without the threats presented by drug use. However, I have some serious doubts as to whether these plans will have the effects that are hoped for, or indeed whether they may be counterproductive. So far, the evidence, gained mostly from the 700 or so schools in America that have instituted the practice and the Abbey School in Faversham, Kent suggests that the jury is still out. Meanwhile, there are other methods that have shown themselves to be effective in driving down the incidence of drug use in schools. Though random drug testing in schools should be cautioned against for moral reasons - schools do not own the bodies of their pupils after all - there are practical objections aplenty. The most simple is cost. Though one test supplier is offering the initial testing kits for free, each kit costs between UKP10 and UKP35, which having only a 98% accuracy means that any positive result needs to be double checked at a cost of at least UKP50 a time. These costs will come from the school budget, putting pressure on other school services. Even the confirmatory tests are not 100% accurate, leaving a school open to legal challenge from either the child accused, or their parents. The most serious finding published by Neil McKeganey, Professor of Drug Misuse Research at Glasgow University for the Joseph Rowntree Trust, is that the drug that is easiest to pick up - cannabis - is the least harmful; and that children not wishing to get caught but still wishing to take drugs transfer usage to more serious drugs, thus utterly undermining the whole project. And finally it fails in its target of deterrence. As one US supreme Court Judge put it; random drug testing, "falls short doubly if deterrence is its aim: it invades the privacy of students who need deterrence least, and risks steering students at greatest risk for substance abuse away from extra-curricular involvement that potentially may palliate drug problems." Then there is the whole question of trust. The way in which it is done can undermine trust between students and teachers, and between parents and children. Trust once broken in this way is almost impossible to rebuild - one moment a teacher is mentor, the next a policeman. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath