Pubdate: Tue, 21 Sep 1999 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Lisa M. Krieger, Mercury News Staff Writer SURVEY OF TEENS`ALARMING' Health chief:Parents should talk to kids about drugs, drinking and sex. Even in affluent and educated Santa Clara County, a worrisome number of youngsters are experimenting with smoking, drinking and sex -- and have contemplated suicide -- according to the first comprehensive survey of teens by the Santa Clara County Department of Public Health. ``It is alarming, because these behaviors are all preventable,'' said Dr. Martin D. Fenstersheib, the county's health officer. ``They are things that kids are choosing to do: high-risk behaviors that lead to injury and illness.'' The survey of 7,000 Santa Clara County students in seventh through 12th grade, conducted in partnership with the State Department of Education and released Monday, is a major new benchmark of adolescent behavior and will be used to help decide how to encourage healthy behavior. It suggests that parents should pay closer attention to their children's behavior and the friends they spend time with, offer useful advice, serve as good role models and be clear but realistic about family expectations for academic achievement. As with most health problems, the best way to deal with high-risk behaviors is to prevent them from occurring in the first place, Fenstersheib said. ``Parents here are busy; everyone is working . . . but parents are the biggest influence in their kids' lives. They need to teach their kids how to say no,'' said Fenstersheib. ``They can't expect the schools to do it.'' The survey of high school students, initiated in 1997, found that: 56.7 percent had tried cigarette smoking. About one-fourth of high school students had smoked in the past month. 65.5 percent had had at least one drink of alcohol during their lifetime. More than one-third of high school students had had a drink in the past month and about one-quarter had gone on a binge in the past month, defined as having five or more drinks on one occasion. 38.8 percent had tried smoking marijuana. One-quarter of students said they had smoked in the past month. 9.5 percent had tried smoking, snorting or free-basing cocaine. 31 percent had had sexual intercourse; of these, one-quarter had four or more partners. Of those who had sex, one-third said they used no birth control. By 12th grade, nearly half had had sexual intercourse. 22.3 percent reported thinking seriously about attempting suicide within the past year. About 18 percent said they had actually planned their suicide. Also worrisome were signs of early risk-taking behaviors among middle school children. The survey found that 33 percent had tried cigarette smoking; 51.5 percent had tried drinking alcohol; 14 percent had used marijuana during their lifetime; 9.6 percent had had sexual intercourse, and 3.6 percent had tried cocaine. The findings also suggest that more students are engaging in sex, smoking, drinking and cocaine use at a younger age. A higher proportion of middle school students than high school students reported engaging in sexual intercourse and the use of tobacco, alcohol and cocaine before the age of 13. The report notes that Santa Clara County teens do somewhat better than their peers elsewhere in the state and country in these high-risk behaviors. For example, 39 percent of county teens have smoked pot, compared with 46 percent of California teens and 47 percent of U.S. teens. The 65 percent prevalence of alcohol experimentation in Santa Clara County is significantly lower than that reported by California youth (76 percent) and U.S. youth (79 percent). The survey, designed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, queried the students about their involvement in behaviors that underlie the leading causes of death, injury, illness and social problems among youth. Identical surveys are being conducted in other counties across the United States. Fourteen high schools and 12 middle schools in the county were selected to provide a representative sample of students. Of the 7,000 students surveyed, about 5,000 were included in the final data analysis. Although the report found that children here are relatively healthy, it identified significant disparities based on race and gender. In general, Latino teens were the most likely to have experimented with tobacco smoking, alcohol use, cocaine use and marijuana smoking than those of other racial and ethnic groups. Asian/Pacific Islander teens were the least likely. Across almost every measure, boys were more likely than girls to report involvement in these risky behaviors. The survey also revealed other forms of substance abuse. It found that 2.7 percent of high school students had used steroids without a doctor's prescription; 1.6 percent had injected drugs; 15.7 percent had tried illegal drugs, such as LSD, PCP, ``ecstasy,'' psychotropic mushrooms, speed, or heroin; and 14.7 percent had sniffed glue or breathed the contents of aerosol spray cans. Parents can set a good example by using alcohol only in moderation, preferably with meals, and never suggesting it as a solution to stress or other emotional problems, said the health department experts. They can describe to teens how quickly a person can become hooked on nicotine and how hard it can be to break the addiction. Parents also can teach kids how to rise above the influence of peers and advertising -- and think for themselves, they said. They can also help foster a healthy self-image, so that kids can resist outside influences. ``This report is a valuable tool for health officials, educators and others about the welfare of our children,'' said Dr. Guadalupe S. Olivas, director of the Public Health Department. ``It provides baseline information that will help us target resources where they are most needed,'' she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea