Pubdate: Sun, 14 Mar 1999 Source: Providence Journal-Bulletin (RI) Copyright: 1999 The Providence Journal Company Contact: http://projo.com/ SCHOOLS RELUCTANT TO PARTICIPATE IN SURVEY ON TEEN BEHAVIORS The state's efforts to monitor risky teenage behavior, including drug use, is in jeopardy because too many school districts have refused to participate in the survey. So far, seven school districts have declined. Unless some can be persuaded to change their minds, the Health Department will not be able to collect meaningful data. Will the department then scotch the survey? "I don't know what we will do," said Jana E. Hesser, coordinator of the Rhode Island Youth Risk Behavior Survey. "I have to tell you I'm quite concerned." Designed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the survey asks questions pertaining to drug and alcohol use, sexual behavior, exercise, diet, violence and suicide. Some 46 states and territories participate. Rhode Island conducted the survey in 1995 and 1997, and had hired a private survey company to do it again this year. Earlier this month, the Scituate School Committee voted unanimously not to allow the survey, expressing concerns that it might actually encourage the bad behavior it was inquiring about. "Isn't that one of the old-time justifications for not telling kids about sex?" Hesser said. "Which obviously is totally naive because kids all know about these things anyway." The Scituate vote was taken at a public meeting, and reported in the press, but Hesser said she could not reveal the names of the other five districts that begged off. Not only are the individual surveys anonymous, but the state does not disclose which districts participate, nor does it provide results broken down by community. To get a representative sample, the state goes to 25 randomly selected schools, and surveys 100 randomly selected students within each. In past years, only a few school districts declined. But this year, the schools, which are now required by the Department of Education to survey and to test their students, are apparently weary of all the prodding and probing. Hesser says that the Youth Behavior Risk Survey provides invaluable information about the major sources of illness and death among adolescents, as well as behaviors - such as physical inactivity - that set the stage for illness in adulthood. Public health and school officials need to know about these behaviors so they can target their interventions. "There's no other way to get this information," Hesser said. "A lot of it doesn't show up in clinical settings or through law enforcement, and it's important to be able to track it." For example, Hesser is publishing a report in this month's issue of Medicine and Health/Rhode Island, a local medical journal, that provides information from the 1997 survey about teen drug use. It points to an unusually high use of inhalants - sniffing glue or other substances to get high - a form of drug abuse that is often overlooked but can be deadly. In the survey of students in grades 9 through 12, 21 percent reported using inhalants; nationwide the figure is only 16 percent. "Inhalant use has been going up. People don't seem to pay much attention to it," Hesser said. "It's probably the most dangerous form of drug abuse. You can be dead after one use." Additionally, Hesser's report points out a high correlation between cigarette smoking and use of alcohol and other drugs. Because it may be easier to find out that a student smokes, this habit can be a red flag that other drug use may be going on. "If a young person smokes cigarettes, the probability of present or future alcohol, marijuana, or other drug use increases," Hesser writes. "If a physician knows that an adolescent patient smokes, the physician should be alert to other possible drug use." Others findings from the 1997 survey are: *More than three out of four students have consumed at least one drink of alcohol. *About one in three consumed five or more drinks in a row during the previous month. *About one in three had his or her first drink before age 13. *One in three students smoked cigarettes during the previous 30 days. *One in four smoked his or her first whole cigarette before age 13. *Almost half (47 percent) have used marijuana once or more in their life and nearly a third (29 percent) had used marijuana in the month before the survey. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake