Pubdate: Sun, 1 Nov 1998 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Copyright: 1998 Times Newspapers Ltd. Author: Judith O'Reilly, Education Correspondent MIDDLE-CLASS CHILDREN AT TOP OF DRUG LEAGUE MIDDLE-CLASS children are nearly twice as likely to use illegal drugs as those from some lower social classes, a study has revealed. Social scientists found that as many as one in seven middle-class 11 and 12-year-olds has experimented with drugs including cannabis, cocaine and heroin. The research, carried out at Glasgow University, challenges the common assumption that children from poor families are most likely to abuse drugs. Nearly 1,000 youngsters aged between 11 and 12 were separated into six social groups, according to their parents' occupations. In the highest class - where parents were mostly professional people such as lawyers and doctors - 14.5% of youngsters admitted trying drugs. That compared with 7.5% of children in social class three - sons and daughters of manual labourers. The trend was confirmed by a second analysis which showed that among the children of middle-class and white-collar families, one seventh had tried drugs. By comparison, nationally only 1 in 10 children had tried drugs before the age of 13. Most of the drug use involved cannabis, which nearly 40% admitted they had taken. Almost 20% had used temazepam, a prescription sleeping pill, 8% had tried cocaine and 6% heroin. LSD, amphetamines and ecstasy were also popular among the drug-using children, of whom more than half had tried more than one substance. About 60% of the children who had taken drugs already had another user in their family, usually a brother or sister. The spread of drug use among children is likely to be linked to the sharp increase in drug use among people in their teens and early twenties. Very young children are far more likely to be exposed to drug abuse through older siblings and, in some cases, their parents, than in the past. Neil McKeganey, director of the Centre for Drug Misuse at Glasgow University, who wrote the report, said: "Children are naturally curious so, if they are exposed to drugs at home, they will want to experiment. It is that exposure which makes the difference rather than their social class." Last week an 11-year-old was found with heroin worth UKP500 in one of his shoes at a primary school in Scotland. Another eight-year-old was caught with cannabis worth more than UKP1,000 at a primary school in Surrey. Janet, a personal assistant in Manchester, discovered that her two sons were using drugs when one was 13 and the other 18. "When I found out, I ranted and raged at them like someone demented," she said this weekend. "I had always thought people who took drugs were scum. But here I was with all my ambitions for my own children and they were taking drugs. I never want to feel like that again." The report comes as the government is drawing up new guidelines for schools, under which children as young as five will be taught about the dangers of drugs. Older children, from 7 to 11, will be told how to resist temptation and peer pressure. Keith Hellawell, the former chief constable who was last year appointed by the government to lead the fight against drugs, said: "We need to develop children's social skills so they feel they can say 'No' without causing offence and can resist pressure to conform and experiment." - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry