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Drug Watch International National Study Reveals Drug-Experienced Parents See Less RiskJust as Teens Confront New Drug Threats and Changing Landscape, New Cohort of Parents Carry Lax Attitudes, Less Concern About Drug Risks Facing Kids, Talk Less With Teens About Drugs New York, NY. - When it comes to today's parents and their views about drugs, it appears old attitudes are like old habits -- they die hard, and sometimes, not at all. In its 17th annual tracking study of parents' attitudes toward drugs and teen drug use, the Partnership for a Drug-Free America(R) today reports that the current generation of parents -- the most drug-experienced group on record -- sees less risk in a wide variety of illicit drugs, and are significantly less likely to be talking with their teens about drug abuse, when compared to moms and dads just a few years ago. "While the vast majority of parents have left old habits behind, they're carrying old attitudes and beliefs forward," said Steve Pasierb, president & CEO of the Partnership. "If old habits die hard, the data suggest that lax attitudes about drugs die even harder."
Released today at a press briefing in New York, the 2004 Partnership Attitude Tracking Study (PATS) surveyed 1,205 parents across the country
(margin of error = +/- 2.8 percent). Top-line findings of the nationally projectable study(1) show: Many of today's parents (those with pre-teens and teens) were high school students themselves during the late '70s and early '80s -- a period when teen drug use reached its absolute high point.(2) In fact, when compared to high school seniors today, teen drug use rates were significantly higher in the late '70s and early '80s. "It's not all that uncommon today to come across teenagers who've never use drugs who have parents who have," Pasierb said. While few of today's parents use drugs today (11 percent report smoking marijuana in the past year), 58 percent have tried marijuana at least once in their lives, according to the Partnership's study. Significant percentages report trying other illicit substances as well.
Despite their first-hand knowledge about the issue, the Partnership's study finds that today's parents significantly underestimate the presence
of drugs in their teens' lives. Pasierb noted that the drug scene in America is vastly different today than it was back in the late '70s and '80s. "Alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, cocaine -- parents know these drugs," he said. "Today's teens, however, are exposed to new drugs of abuse -- Ecstasy, GHB, crystal meth and increasingly, a wide variety of prescription and over-the-counter medications. In total, parents are seeing less risk in a variety of drugs and fewer parents are talking with kids just when teens are facing new drugs and new drug threats. All of this adds up to a potentially dangerous convergence in the trends -- one that we must interrupt." The Partnership's tracking data underscore the powerful influence parents can have on teen decision-making about drugs. Teens who report learning a lot about the risks of drugs at home are up to half as likely to use drugs, according to the data. "To be clear, parents don't want their kids using drugs -- any drugs," Pasierb said. "But the data tell us today's parents don't regard drug use as seriously as past generations of parents. Our challenge is getting parents to look at this issue anew, and in ways that penetrate their current beliefs and attitudes." Source: The Partnership for a Drug-Free America - www.drugfree.org/ http://www.infozine.com/news/stories/op/storiesView/sid/6091/
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