Pubdate: Wed, 29 Dec 2010 Source: Huntsville Forester, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Huntsville Forester Contact: http://www.cottagecountrynow.ca/generalform Website: http://www.huntsvilleforester.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2430 Author: Pamela Steel DRUG, ALCOHOL USE AMONG HIGH SCHOOL TEENS EXPLORED HUNTSVILLE - The Forester ran a three-part series on drug use among area high school students in 2010. The first article addressed students' perception of drug use among their peers. We also looked at the issue from the point of view of educators, police, families and health care professionals. The response to the series from readers was passionate. Some were angry because they felt we were portraying teens and the schools in a poor light. Many others thanked us for giving them a starting point to discuss the use of drugs with their children. Through our research we found disturbing evidence that drug use in Muskoka is higher than in the rest of the province and that many kids aren't looking any further than their home medicine cabinet for the increasingly popular abuse of prescription drugs. "If you want drugs, just go to the high school." This is the statement of a Grade 10 student from Huntsville High School in conversation with the Forester in April. "You can turn a corner in the hall and someone's selling drugs," he said. The student was hanging out at a local park with two friends on a Sunday afternoon and they offered to share their experience of drug and alcohol use among their peers. Their stories mirror and exceed stats put out by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in its yearly status report on drug use among children from Grades 7 through 12. The study showed that "by far, the most commonly used drug is alcohol, with 58.2 per cent of students reporting use during the 12 months before the survey. Cannabis is the next most common drug, with 25.6 per cent reporting past year use. The non-medical use of prescription opioid pain relievers, such as codeine, Percocet, Percodan, Demerol, or Tylenol 3, ranks third at 17.8 per cent. Tobacco ranks fourth, with 11.7 per cent reporting smoking cigarettes during the past year." Perhaps the most disturbing trend is the report that "20.3 per cent of students report using at least one prescription drug non-medically (without a doctor's prescription) during the past year." OxyContin is a highly addictive prescription painkiller containing the opioid oxycodone that delivers an initial rush of euphoria, much like heroin, according to the centre. "In 2009 . we estimate that between 1.3 and 2.0 per cent of students use OxyContin . About 16,700 students in Ontario." They also reported there is no significant difference in non-medical OxyContin use between males and females, but that use increases with grade, peaking in Grade 11 at 2.9 per cent. The use of the drug is most likely in the northern regions where it clocks in at 3.2 per cent of the student population. Drug councillors say the use of "oxy" is becoming increasingly popular in Huntsville. Young people take the pills from their parents or grandparents, crush them and snort them up through their nose for immediate uptake into the blood system. We spoke to students from Huntsville High School and from Bracebridge's public and Catholic high schools. None of them admitted to using oxy or other "hard" drugs. They all said they knew of students using the drugs and described these students as "skids," "rampies," or from a more socially aware female student, "the kids who've had a hard life." Three boys, one each from Grades 9, 10 and 11 all admitted to drinking alcohol and estimated that 99 per cent of their peers drink, with 80 per cent drinking regularly on weekends. This is often binge drinking where the point of the exercise is to get drunk. "Get wasted. That's the whole point. Then they put it up on Facebook. It's so stupid," said one boy. Other students we spoke with also said posting drunken images on Facebook was the norm. A Grade 11 student from Bracebridge Muskoka Lakes Secondary School said, "On a Friday or Saturday, you go on Facebook and a lot of them are there, `Oh, I'm so drunk.' They're very open about it. People at school go out of their way; they want to get sooo drunk - sick or drunk out of control." This student said neither she nor her friends have ever been offered drugs, although she knows there are substances for sale in the school. "It depends on the person you are and the people you're friends with. My friends are not and never will be into it. There are people you would never suspect taking . oxy, ecstasy.." The boys said that 75 per cent of their male peers have tried smoking pot and that easily half use it regularly. They felt that girls used all drugs at about one-third the rate of boys. "High school is the time when people are going to try stuff," said one boy. "But you don't want to get sent to jail or whatever." A Grade 11 girl spoke passionately about her friends having the self- confidence to refuse all drugs. "We care about school - we care about learning - we care about things going on around us. We're global thinking over close-minded, self- centred thinking. I would have the confidence to say no," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt