HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html State To Study Teen Marijuana Use
Pubdate: Tue, 11 Mar 2003
Source: Oklahoman, The (OK)
Copyright: 2003 The Oklahoma Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.oklahoman.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/318
Author: Jim Killackey

STATE TO STUDY TEEN MARIJUANA USE

As many as 10,000 Oklahoma schoolchildren ages 12 to 17 will be surveyed 
this fall about their use of illicit drugs, alcohol and tobacco as part of 
a first-ever survey by the state Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services 
Department.

A primary goal is to pinpoint the adolescent use of marijuana, the most 
commonly used illegal drug among Oklahoma teenagers, said Larry Didier, the 
mental health agency's prevention program coordinator.

Marijuana use represents nearly 60 percent of all illicit drug use among 
Oklahoma youths, he said.

Students in grades six, eight, 10 and 12 from about 80 randomly selected 
public school districts statewide will participate in the 180-question 
survey this fall, Didier said Monday. Some private and parochial schools 
also may choose to participate. Cost of the survey is about $100,000, he said.

Surveys will be given in late September and October, with results expected 
by Jan. 1. Each survey can be completed in about 35 to 50 minutes. Names of 
school districts and survey participants will be kept confidential. Parents 
and guardians will be sent home a letter in late April or May outlining 
involvement in the surveys.

Latest available data show at least 19,000 Oklahoma youths between the ages 
of 12 and 17 use marijuana on a regular basis. In Oklahoma, marijuana has 
surpassed alcohol as the top substance responsible for adolescent 
admissions into drug-abuse treatment programs, Didier said.

The fall surveys also will try to identify the underlying reasons for 
marijuana use, he said.

"We definitely want to provoke concern" about the widespread use of 
marijuana and prompt community responses to the problem, he said.

This week, several leading national health, education and safety 
organizations are publishing in 300 U.S. daily newspapers an "Open Letter" 
to parents warning them about physical and mental health consequences, lung 
damage and risky behaviors linked to youth marijuana use. The half-page 
"letter" advertisement is scheduled to run in Thursday's editions of The 
Oklahoman.

"We're speaking directly to parents about the specific ways marijuana can 
damage a young person's future," John Walters, director of the Office of 
National Control Policy, said in a statement released Monday.

"Marijuana is riskier than many parents think. Smoking marijuana hurts 
young bodies and minds, and more young people are in treatment for 
marijuana than for all other illicit drugs combined."

Oklahoma City has been chosen as one of two U.S. cities to conduct a "Court 
TV Teenage Summit" on the dangers of adolescent marijuana use and its 
impact on young lives.

The event is scheduled for taping April 8 at Stage Center in downtown 
Oklahoma City. The "Straight Talk About Marijuana" teen summit will include 
students from the Oklahoma City and Putnam City school districts, and 
substance- abuse prevention experts from the metro area.

According to the American Psychiatric Association, marijuana use may 
trigger panic attacks, paranoia and even psychoses, especially if users are 
suffering from anxiety, depression or thinking problems.

Smoking marijuana "can injure or destroy lung tissue. Marijuana smoke 
contains 50 percent to 70 percent more of some cancer-causing chemicals 
than does tobacco smoke," said John L. Kirkwood, American Lung Association 
president.

Teenagers "who are high on marijuana are less able to make safe, smart 
decisions about sex -- including saying 'no,'" said Sarah Brown, director 
of the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy. "Teens who have used 
marijuana are four times more likely to get pregnant or get someone 
pregnant than teens who haven't."

Research shows that teens listen to their parents when it comes to 
decisions about drug use, officials said. Two-thirds of youth ages 13 to 17 
say fear of losing their parents' respect is a main reason they don't smoke 
marijuana.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom