Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jan 2009 Source: Interlake Spectator, The (CN MB) Copyright: 2009 The Interlake Spectator Contact: http://cgi.bowesonline.com/pedro.php?id8&x=contact Website: http://www.interlakespectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2164 Author: Roger Newman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) STUDENTS CUTTING DOWN ON ALCOHOL AND DRUGS Manitoba high school students are using less alcohol and marijuana than they were three years ago, according to Katheleen Mulroy, the Addictions Foundation of Manitoba (AFM) counsellor in the Evergreen School Division. Mulroy recently told the Evergreen School Board that 68.7 per cent of the province's high school students reported alcohol use in 2007, down from 73 per cent in 2004. She also said student use of cannabis (marijuana) has declined to 29.2 per cent from 33.3 per cent over the same period. The counsellor was presenting the results of an AFM study undertaken last year in 55 randomly selected schools across the province. Evergreen schools were not involved, but they have participated in past AFM studies to gauge the level of drug use by students in grades seven to 12. Mulroy said there is a pattern for student use of alcohol and other substances to increase significantly between grades seven and 12. She said only 30 per cent of grade seven students and 40 per cent of grade eights have tasted alcohol while 80 per cent of Grade 12s were users in 2007. "The middle grades are where interventions and preventions should be focused," Mulroy said, adding that younger students are most likely to change their habits. She said 20 per cent of students were smoking cigarettes last year and 23.8 per cent were social gamblers, but only .6 per cent were problem gamblers. She also came up with a new category - the misuse of prescription drugs or using somebody else's prescription. "Girls are way more likely to use the prescriptions of others," she said, noting the figures are 2.4 per cent for girls and 1.8 per cent for boys. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin