Pubdate: Mon, 20 Apr 1998 Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: Mike Merritt PARENTS 'NEED CLASSES ON DRUG CULTURE' A leading Scottish drug researcher is calling on the Government and councils to fund evening classes for parents so they can understand their children's drug culture better. Dr Martin Plant, the director of the Alcohol and Health Research Centre in Edinburgh, said the classes were needed to bridge the generation gap to show why children take drugs. He is working on research which will be submitted to scientific journals this year. Dr Plant's call comes in the wake of record customs seizures which show that the country is being flooded with cheap heroin. "We just don't have any recognisable way of countering this [increased drug use] at the moment - shock horror anti-drug adverts just don't work. "By far the biggest influence on young people taking drugs is peer group and family pressures, coupled with the availability and social fashion of drugs. The pop industry is, for instance, fairly pro-drugs. The best way to counter this is to educate parents better about the drug scene and to bridge the generation gap in their understanding. "Evening and weekend classes would be an ideal way, though what form they should take is still being investigated. "I would also be in favour of educating youngsters about drugs in primary schools because all the evidence shows that the low age for drug use has been coming down." Dr Plant has just done a pilot study for the Western Isles Health Board on encouraging greater involvement of parents and community groups. His current research has sprung from that study.