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Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Most alcohol, drug abuse starts in teen years-study
A survey of US teenagers
found that most have used
alcohol and drugs by the
time they reach adulthood,
and researchers said this
could be setting many of
those kids up for a lifetime
of substance abuse.
The survey of more than
10,000 teens, published in
the Archives of General
Psychiatry, found that almost
four out of fi ve teens
had tried alcohol and more
than 15 per cent were abusing
it by the time they turned
18-years-old. Some 16 per
cent were abusing drugs by
the age of 18.
‘It’s in adolescence that
the onset of substance abuse
disorders occurs for most
individuals,’ said lead author
Joel Swendsen, director
of research at the National
Center of Scientifi c Research
in Bordeaux, France.
‘That’s where the roots take
place.’ Some 18 per cent of
adults meet standards for
‘lifetime abuse’ of alcohol,
and 11 per cent meet the
criteria for drug abuse, the
study said, suggesting an
early start for at least some
of those substance abusers.
The study is based on
interviews with 10,123 US
teens between the ages of 13
and 18-years-old. They were
surveyed between February
2001 and January 2004. Of
the approximately 3,700
teens between the ages of
13 and 14, about 10 percent
were drinking alcohol regularly,
defi ned as 12 drinks
within a year. That number
jumped to about half on the
approximately 2,300 people
surveyed 17- to 18-yearolds.
According to Swendsen’s
team, almost one in three
of the regular users in the
oldest age group met the
criteria for lifetime alcohol
abuse. The median age
of onset for alcohol abuse,
with or without ‘dependence,’
was 14. As for drugs,
about 60 percent of the
teens said they had the opportunity
to use illicit drugs,
such as marijuana, cocaine,
tranquilizers, stimulants and
painkillers.
About one in ten of the 13-
and 14-year olds said they
used at least one such drug,
and that increased to about
40 per cent in the oldest age
group. Marijuana was the
most common type of drug
used, followed by prescription
drugs.
The median age of onset
for drug abuse was 14 with
dependence and 15 without
dependence.
‘The reason we worry
about it is that the earlier
they use these substances
the earlier they become addicted
to it,’ said Susan
Foster, vice president and
director of policy research
and analysis at the National
Center on Addiction and
Substance Abuse at Columbia
University in New York.
Foster, who was not involved
in the study, said
starting to use potentially
addictive substances is especially
dangerous to younger
people because their brains
are still developing. ‘There’s
really a type of rewiring
that goes on with continued
use than can result in an increased
interest in using and
an inability to stop using,’
she added.
Foster, whose organization
published a comprehensive
report on substance abuse
in US adolescents last year,
said the numbers in the current
report were consistent
with past research. ‘We’ve
had spikes and declines of
abuse across the population,’
she told Reuters Health.
Swendsen’s team wrote that
strategies need to target adolescents
to prevent drug and
alcohol abuse, but need to
take into account the different
forces that infl uence it.
‘We don’t need to bombard
them with information
that’s beyond their stage of
development, but don’t think
a 13-year-old doesn’t know
what cannabis is,’ Swendsen
told Reuters Health in a telephone
interview.
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