Pubdate: Fri, 31 Mar 2006 Source: Appalachian News-Express (KY) Copyright: 2006 Appalachian News-Express Contact: http://www.news-expressky.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1450 Author: Mary Music, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) MORE KIDS TO BE DRUG TESTED More Pike County students will be randomly drug tested next year - and they could be tested more often. Until this week, a maximum of 20 percent of students could be drug tested in Pike County schools. Tuesday, Pike County Board of Education members changed the policy to a minimum of 20 percent. Eugene Sisco, with ASAP Consulting, asked the board to make the change in order to "broaden the pool" of students who can be tested and allow the district to maintain a grant that pays for the program. Sisco said he expects to complete a full analysis of this year's testing results within a couple of weeks. This year, Sisco said they should test at least 4,000 students. One-third of the students who need to be tested in order to fulfill the grant agreement have already been tested. Sisco, who told board members his company has expended half of the money appropriated for the program, said they have enough supplies to complete testing for another one-third of the student body by October. In Sept., he said, the company should meet its goal. Sisco estimated that at the end of the three year grant cycle that 65 percent of Pike County students should be tested for drug use. This year, he said, three students tested positive, compared to at least eight students who tested positive last year. In a survey, 49 percents of students said that they or their friends have cut down on their use of drugs because of the drug testing policy. Sisco said 62 percent of students also claimed they will cut down or stop their drug use if the company is allowed to test in schools several times a year. "To me, that says it's working," Sisco told the board. The University of Michigan's "Monitoring the Future" program, which annually surveys 50,000 eighth, tenth and twelfth grade students in 400 public and private schools about drug use, reported in 2003 that student drug testing, whether random or otherwise, was not effective in reducing the amount of drug use in American middle schools and high schools. The report, which was forwarded to the Journal of School Health, found "virtually identical" rates of drug use in schools with mandated tested and schools that did not implement drug testing policies. A press release issued by the college regarding the report said 36 percent of twelfth grade students in non-drug testing schools claimed to have used marijuana at least 12 months prior to the day they took the survey. In comparison, 37 percent of students in schools where drug testing was mandated, claimed to have used marijuana 12 months prior to the day they took the survey. After this report was released, surveys from another 169 schools --a total of 891 middle schools and high schools in the country--were included and analyzed with a focus on random drug testing. At the time, only 7 of the 891 schools analyzed had policies for random drug testing in place. This study also showed that there was "virtually no difference" between schools that tested and those that didn't test their students. A follow-up to that study has not been released, but the college said in its annual report for 2005 that the number of students who claim to have taken illicit drugs 12 months prior to the survey was down more than a third for eighth graders, a quarter for tenth graders, and ten percent for twelfth graders. Additionally, the report indicated that many classes of drugs showed little or no systematic change in 2005 in terms of student abuse, even though many of the drug classes are below their "peak level of use." The only drugs that appeared to have a pattern of "modest" increase in 2005 were sedatives, Oxycontin, inhalants, the report said. The survey and other related material is available online at www.monitoringthefuture.org. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek