Press Releases: 1999-2000
CASA* PAPER: RURAL 8TH GRADERS USING DRUGS, SMOKING, DRINKING AT HIGHER RATES THAN URBAN 8TH GRADERS
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 9 a.m. ET, Wednesday, January 26, 2000 |
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| Washington, DC - Smoking, drinking and drug use among young teens is higher in rural America than in the nation's large urban centers, according to a White Paper, No Place to Hide: Substance Abuse in Mid-Size Cities and Rural America, released by CASA at the annual meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors which commissioned the paper. According to the report, eighth graders living in rural America are 104% likelier to use amphetamines, including methamphetamine, than those in urban areas, and 50% likelier to use cocaine. The CASA study, the first comprehensive assessment of substance abuse by population centers, reports that by any measure, the drug crisis is as common on Main Street as in Manhattan: AIDS is rising faster in rural areas than in large urban centers; more workers test positive for drugs in rural areas of Florida, Tennessee and Indiana than in the three largest metropolitan areas in these states; since 1990 drug law violations have increased more in small communities than in large cities; drugs are as available in small communities as they are in large cities, and adult drug use in such communities is equal to that in large metropolitan centers. At the same time, mid-size cities and rural areas are less equipped to deal with the consequences. Methamphetamine use has hit many areas of the West and Midwest especially hard, placing enormous pressure on hospitals, child welfare systems, treatment and law enforcement. "Bluntly put, meth has come to Main Street, along with other drugs and with magnum force aimed at our children," said Joseph A. Califano, Jr., CASA President and former U. S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. "It's time for all Americans to recognize that drugs are not only an urban problem." Eighth-graders living in rural America are: Among tenth graders, use rates in rural areas exceed those in large urban areas for every drug, except Ecstasy (MDMA) and marijuana. Among twelfth graders, use rates in rural America exceed those in large urban areas for cocaine, crack, amphetamines, inhalants, alcohol, cigarettes and smokeless tobacco. The study finds that adult drug use is about equal across communities of all sizes. Cocaine, crack, heroin and marijuana are reported to be easy to obtain regardless of location. Drug trafficking organizations from Mexico appear to be growing more involved in all aspects of the distribution of illicit drugs in mid-size cities and rural areas. "If we can afford to provide such extraordinary resources for anti-drug military operations in Colombia, then surely we can provide similar resources to assure that every individual in America who seeks treatment can get it, give rural and small city citizens the ability to reduce the demand for drugs through expanded prevention and treatment services, and reduce the availability of drugs in smaller communities by increasing the capabilities of local law enforcement and strengthening the capacity of the DEA to stamp out illegal drug production in rural America," said Califano.
The study calls for stepped up federal funding to: This CASA White Paper was funded by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) with support from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. In preparing the paper, CASA analyzed previously unreleased data from the 1999 Monitoring the Future Study, conducted by the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research (ISR) for the National Institute on Drug Abuse and special runs of data from the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, conducted for CASA by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration's (SAMHSA) Office of Applied Studies. CASA also analyzed data from the Treatment Episode Data Set (TEDS) and the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and from the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program (ADAM) of the National Institute of Justice in the Department of Justice. CASA examined statistics and studies from a number of states, conducted numerous interviews with local officials, law enforcement officers and other experts in substance abuse and reviewed more than 300 articles and publications. The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University is the only national organization that brings together under one roof all the professional disciplines needed to study and combat all types of substance abuse as they affect all aspects of society. CASA's missions are to: inform Americans of the economic and social costs of substance abuse and its impact on their lives; assess what works in prevention, treatment and law enforcement; encourage every individual and institution to take responsibility to combat substance abuse and addiction; provide those on the front lines with tools they need to succeed; and remove the stigma of substance abuse and replace shame and despair with hope. |
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