Pubdate: Fri, 09 Oct 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Jeff Bell, Staff Writer TEEN DRUG, ALCOHOL USE DOWN Survey Suggests Young People Buck Trend To Heavier Drinking A new report indicates the use of alcohol, tobacco and other substances among B.C. teenagers is down. Based largely on a survey of close to 30,000 Grade 7 to 12 students -- 92 per cent of B.C. students in those grades -- the report was prepared by the University of Victoria-based Centre for Addictions Research of B.C. and the Vancouver-based McCreary Centre Society. The society does a survey on adolescent health every five years, and this time included more focused questions on substance use. The downward trend in some substance use is no cause for complacency but it's encouraging, said Tim Stockwell, director of the UVic-based centre. "It's nice to see a bit of daylight and some grounds for optimism." Tobacco use has shown the steepest decline at eight per cent in the last five years. Marijuana use is down seven per cent and alcohol use has dropped four per cent. "I think B.C.'s been a leader on tobacco," Stockwell said. "Marijuana's clearly overtaken tobacco, but that is also going down. [It's] taken over from tobacco as the main drug of abuse for smoking among teenagers." He said teenagers' declining alcohol use contrasts with overall alcohol consumption in B.C., which has climbed 16 per cent in the past decade. "So young people appear to be bucking the trend. There's something good going on." But he pointed out that substance-related issues among youth increase with age. "It's quite clear that as the kids get older, there's more and more experimentation and some significant problems being reported, but the overall level of use and related harm is down. "As there's less drinking in any population group there are less related risk behaviours and problems." One trend is the combining of substances, such as alcohol with marijuana or other drugs, Stockwell said. The biggest jump among B.C. teenagers is in the use of prescription pills, which has gone from nine to 15 per cent. Use of hallucinogens, which can include LSD and ecstasy, is reported to be up slightly from seven to nine per cent. Ecstasy is believed to be the dominant substance in that category. Stockwell said survey respondants were asked if they'd tried certain substances, but not how often or how recently. The information gathered in B.C. is more positive than in many other places, he said, noting that alcohol use among young people in Britain, Ireland, Italy and Australia, for example, is getting worse. If you're a parent in B.C., the chances are good that your teenager neither smokes nor drinks, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr