Kids are learning drugs
are harmful
But not enough are learning it from their parents.
by Thomas A. Hedrick
TWEENS & TEENS
News May 2004
There’s good news to share about teen drug use
in America: Teenagers are increasingly saying “no”
to some of the dangerous substances readily available
in neighborhoods across the country. A recent report
from the Partnership for a Drug-Free America found that
drug use among teens is down ten percent in the past
five years— that’s encouraging. But the
report also shows that only one in three kids is learning
a lot about drugs from their parents— and that’s
a missed opportunity.
One area of particular progress in the report was in
teen use of the drug Ecstasy. Ecstasy (3-4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine)
use among teens in grades 7 through 12 dropped 25 percent
in the past two years. It is a psychoactive drug with
amphetamine-like and hallucinogenic properties that
can have damaging health effects such as severe dehydration,
seizures and heart failure. While much is unknown about
the long-term effects of Ecstasy, it’s use may
damage the parts of the brain that play an important
role in regulating mood, appetite, pain, learning and
memory.
Ecstasy grew in popularity in the late 1990s. Found
in tablet form in different colors and with different
symbols, many of them familiar logos, cartoon characters
or sports team emblems, its whimsical look and slang
terms such as “love drug” or “hug
drug,” led many teens to believe that Ecstasy
was harmless. What followed was an alarming 71 percent
rise in teen use of Ecstasy from 1999 to 2001—
with more than one in ten teens reporting trying the
drug. Meanwhile, most parents had never even heard of
Ecstasy.
An extensive Ecstasy education advertising campaign
by the Partnership sought to help parents and teens
understand the very real dangers associated with the
drug. Two years later, research indicates the popularity
of Ecstasy is tapering off and use has dropped an astounding
25 percent since its peak in 2001— meaning 770,000
fewer teens tried Ecstasy in this two-year period. The
advertising appears to be working. Teens who frequently
saw anti-drug ads were significantly less likely to
use Ecstasy, and the number of teens that say they have
“learned a lot” about the risks of drugs
from anti-drug advertising increased 65 percent in the
past five years.
While advertising may help educate teens about drugs,
not enough kids are learning about the dangers of drugs
from their parents. Only 30 percent of teens say they
learn a lot about the risks of drugs at home. Considering
the power of parents who get involved, teens who learned
a lot about the risks of drugs at home were 57 percent
less likely to try Ecstasy.
Despite progress on Ecstasy, one of every two teens
reported using drugs in 2003. Of particular concern
to the parents of tweens, inhalant abuse is on the rise
and fewer kids see risk in using inhalants to get high.
Inhalants are ordinary household products that are inhaled
or sniffed to get high. There are hundreds of household
products on the market today that can be misused as
inhalants such as gasoline, cleaning fluids, fabric
protector and others. They can cause intoxicating effects,
and sniffing highly concentrated amounts of these chemicals
can directly induce heart failure and even death. Younger
adolescents are more likely than older adolescents to
abuse inhalants.
This information speaks volumes to parents about preventing
tweens from ever trying drugs. While few tweens are
exposed to drugs in grade school, exposure skyrockets
in middle school. The average age of first use of drugs
is between 13 and 14, making it critical that tween
parents start early and often educating their kids about
the dangers of drugs. Keep in mind grandparents, mentors
and big brothers and sisters can help too. Drug use
is a choice that every child faces. Make sure yours
knows how to make the right decision.