Pubdate: Thu, 12 Apr 2007
Source: Clarion News, The (PA)
Copyright: 2007 The Clarion News
Contact:  http://www2.theclarionnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4402
Author: Amy A. Thompson, Clarion News writer

STUDENT DRUG USE/EXPERIMENTATION ABOVE AVERAGE HERE

COUNTYWIDE -- The percentage of Clarion County students  who have 
tried or regularly use alcohol and other types  of drugs is above 
state and national averages,  according to a recent study.

Pa. Youth Survey

The Pennsylvania Youth Survey was taken at five of the  seven school 
districts in Clarion County . At those  schools, sixth-, eighth-, 
10th- and 12th-graders were  polled and 1,194 surveys were deemed valid.

Sheila Snyder, representing Clarion Family Net and  Clarion County's 
Promise which is under Family Net, and  Patricia Anderson of the 
Clarion County Cooperative  Extension are visiting Clarion County 
schools trying to  garner support for partnerships which could obtain 
after-school grants aiming to keep students from  falling into drug use.

Anderson said at the Allegheny-Clarion Valley April 9  work session 
she and Snyder are hoping a task force can  be created which works to 
obtain funding and develop  after-school programming for prevention.

"The best way to stop it is through prevention  methods," Snyder said.

Snyder and Anderson identified four domains which can  be targeted 
for prevention including community, family,  school and individuals/peers.

Anderson said A-C Valley is one school which is already  in "unique 
alignment" for grant funding because of its  rural location, 
multi-county student population and  because there are programs 
already in place such as the  FIRST Program.

"We're not here to shove anything down your throat,"  Snyder 
cautioned A-C Valley School Board members.

The pair presented statistics from the survey taken in 2005.

Alcohol Use

According to the results of the survey, alcohol was top  drug being 
tried or used among Clarion County students.

The survey stated 40 percent of Clarion County  sixth-graders said 
they have tried alcohol. The state  average of sixth-graders who have 
tried alcohol is 24  percent. Data was not available for the national 
trends  for sixth-graders.

The number of sixth-graders who said they tried alcohol  within 30 
days prior to taking the survey was about 8  percent. The state 
average was 3 percent. Data was not  available for the national 
trends for sixth-graders.

In addition to recent use, about 3 percent of Clarion  County 
sixth-graders claimed to have binge drank or  consumed five or more 
drinks in a two-hour period  within 30 days prior to taking the 
survey. The state  average for binge drinking among sixth-graders is 1 percent.

The percentage of eighth-graders who have tried alcohol  was about 64 
percent with the state average being about  53 percent and the 
national average being about 41  percent.

The percentage of Clarion County eighth-graders who  tried alcohol 
within 30 days prior to taking the survey  was almost 20 percent with 
the state average being 15  percent, while the national average was 17 percent.

Clarion County eighth-graders were below state and  national averages 
for binge drinking.

The percentage of eighth-graders who said they binge  drank within 30 
days prior to taking the survey was  about 8 percent with the state 
being about 7 percent  and almost 11 percent for the national average.

The percentage of 10th-graders who have tried alcohol  is about 76 
percent with the state average being about  75 percent and the 
national trend being about 63  percent.

The percentage of 10th-graders who said they binge  drank within 30 
days prior to taking the survey was  about 39 percent while the state 
average was about 37  percent and the national average was about 33 percent.

The percentage of 10th-grade binge drinkers was about  22 percent 
with the state average being about 20  percent and the national 
average being about 21  percent.

About 86 percent of Clarion County 12-graders polled  said they have 
tried alcohol while the average in the  state is about 85 percent, 
while the national average  is about 75 percent.

The percentage of 12th-grade students who said they had  consumed 
alcohol within 30 days prior to taking the  survey was about 55 
percent with the state average  being about 54 percent and the 
national trend being  about 47 percent.

The percentage of 12th-grade students who said they  binge drank 
within 30 days prior to the survey was  about 39 percent with the 
state average being about 34  percent and the national trend being 
about 28 percent.

Other Substances

In addition to alcohol, the survey showed Clarion  County students 
are using more hard drugs in comparison  to the state and national 
averages, Snyder said.

Some of the other drugs besides alcohol included  cigarettes, 
smokeless tobacco, marijuana, inhalants,  cocaine, crack cocaine, 
heroin, hallucinogens,  methamphetamines, ecstasy, steroids and illicit drugs.

Snyder said each school tended to have a different type  of drug 
problem. Snyder explained one school had an  issue with heroin use, 
another with crack cocaine,  another with cocaine and another with ecstasy.

Besides the well-known drugs, Snyder said there is a  trend among 
students to use drugs from the family  medicine cabinet which may 
include left-over  prescription medications.

"This has become a huge health hazard across the  nation," Snyder said.

Snyder said youth have been known to hold "pharm  parties" in which 
drugs, both prescription and  non-prescription, are put into a bowl 
and mixed  together.

"This is very dangerous, really addictive. This is not  good for the 
kids," Snyder said.

Program Ideas

Anderson said she believes students will attend  after-school 
programs based on the "Healthy Lifestyles"  program she helped 
facilitate last December.

"I did not feel like a babysitting service," Anderson said.

Anderson said the students who attended the program  came to learn.

In addition, Anderson said she believes those students  who attend a 
program have a tendency to tell other  students which increases interest.

"I think there is some sustainability with that,"  Anderson said of 
positive student peer pressure.

Anderson said an idea for programming is to link to  aspects of the 
curriculum students are learning in  school.

Anderson gave an example of the book entitled "The  Biggest Bear," 
which her children have read. The school  could have the Pennsylvania 
Game Commission make a  presentation about bears to tie in with the 
book,  Anderson said.

Snyder said there are many other successful prototypes  of programs 
which can be used such as life skills  programs and research-based programs.

Right now the ideas are in the early stages.

Anderson said the organizations would like to have an  idea of who is 
going to participate in a partnership by  this fall.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman