December
20, 2001
Think fewer teen-agers are smoking? A survey released Wednesday says yes,
and cites sharp declines among the eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders questioned
nationwide.
In Modesto, a 19-year-old put out a cigarette outside a Coffee Road minimart
and said the statistics seem right. Still, Michael Serna, who attends
Valley Business High School, said he sees "a lot of people our age
that smoke."
He said he smokes occasionally with friends. "Our generation, it
takes us awhile to realize smoking isn't good for you."
Mark Loeser, in charge of tobacco education for the Stanislaus County
Health Services Agency, said a survey here probably would not find teen
smoking numbers going down as much as they are nationwide.
"Youths are still using tobacco products, and they can still go
into a store here and purchase them," he said.
The national survey from the University of Michigan also examined drug
use and showed that most figures stayed about the same. More teens reported
having used ecstasy, but the increases were less than in past years.
The tobacco and drug findings are part of the annual Monitoring the Future
survey conducted for the federal government by the University of Michigan's
Institute for Social Research. The statistics are based on a survey of
44,300 students in public and private schools.
The teen smoking statistics:
- 12TH-GRADERS -- 29.5 percent surveyed
had smoked in the 30 days before the survey, down from 31.4 percent
in 2000. The peak in the 1990s was 36.5 percent, in 1997.
- 10TH-GRADERS -- 21.3 percent had
smoked in the previous 30 days, down from 23.9 percent the year before.
The peak came in 1996, at 30.4 percent.
- EIGHTH-GRADERS -- 12.2 percent had
smoked in the previous 30 days, down from 14.6 percent the year before.
The peak came in 1996, at 21 percent.
"These important declines in teen smoking did not just happen by
chance," said Lloyd D. Johnston of the University of Michigan.
"A lot of individuals and organizations have been making concerted
efforts to bring down the unacceptably high rates of smoking among our
youth."
In the Northern San Joaquin Valley, the Stanislaus County Health Services
Agency is planning to present anti-smoking messages at movie theaters
and on radio stations.
Loeser is concerned about tobacco sales to underage youths.
Kids have little trouble buying
Recently, his office sent teen-agers into 168 stores in Modesto, Ceres,
Hughson and Newman to see if clerks would sell to underage youths. Twenty-one
store clerks were ready to sell cigarettes, chewing tobacco and cigars
to the teens, Loeser said.
Public health officials lauded the survey's findings on drug use.
"Overall, drug use among America's teen-agers has remained level
or declined for the fifth year in a row, and that's good news. But we
must remain vigilant to the threats that heroin, ecstasy, marijuana, alcohol
and other dangerous drugs pose to our youth," Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson said in a statement.
Thompson added that "the finding that fewer teen-agers are smoking
is very encouraging as more teens are making smart choices that will help
them avoid tobacco-related health threats."
John Walters, director of National Drug Control Policy, characterized
the findings as "good news, bad news."
The explosive increases in drug use seen in the early 1990s have stopped,
he said, but still too many people use illegal drugs.
"It's time to make the anti-drug effort catch up to the anti- tobacco
effort," he said.
Alcohol remains the most popular drug with teens, although a slight reduction
was reported in 2001.
Just less than four-fifths of 12th-graders, 79.7 percent, said they had
used alcohol at some point, down from 80.3 percent the year before. But
those who admitted to having been drunk at some time rose from 62.3 percent
to 63.9 percent.
For 10th-graders, 70.1 percent admitted some alcohol use, down from 71.4
percent. The share who said they had been drunk fell from 49.3 percent
to 48.2 percent.
And among eighth-graders, 50.5 percent had had a drink, down from 51.7
percent, and those who had been drunk declined from 25.1 percent to 23.4
percent.
Study data is available online, www.monitoringthefuture.org.
Bee staff writer Kerry McCray contributed
to this report.
Reprinted by permission of Modesto Bee.
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