This November
2000 edition of ReCAPP focuses on the impact of alcohol and other drugs
on teen pregnancy. This month's edition of Topic in Brief includes:
This
edition concludes with an FYI: a link to a New York
Times article about parents and sex education.
There are
complicated, even dangerous, connections between the use of drugs and
alcohol and sexual behaviors. Yet the effects of most drug prevention
efforts have been modest at best. Risky behaviors are not going away,
and neither is our responsibility to face them squarely. Perhaps now is
the time for educators to try new strategies to counter the ever increasing
challenges of teen alcohol and drug abuse and the impact on their sexual
risk-taking behavior. Some experts advocate programs which offer comprehensive
and realistic information about the effects of alcohol and other drugs
... along with the assumption that young people can be trusted to make
responsible decisions to stay safe.
Drugs are
chemical substances that have a direct effect on the structure or function
of the body. A drug is any substance that causes a physical or mental
change in the body. Some of the common types of drugs and their effects
are listed below:
| Type
of Drug |
Examples |
Intoxication
Effects |
| Narcotics |
Opium,
Heroin, Morphine |
Pain
relief, euphoria, drowsiness |
| Depressants |
Valium,
Quaaludes, Alcohol, Rohypnol |
Reduced pain and anxiety; feeling of well-being; lowered inhibitions;
slowed pulse and breathing; lowered blood pressure; poor concentration
|
| Stimulants |
Cocaine,
Tobacco, Caffeine, Diet Pills, Ecstasy
|
Increased
heart rate, blood pressure, metabolism; feelings of exhilaration,
energy; increased mental alertness |
Hallucinogens (or psychedelics)
|
LSD,
Mescaline |
Altered
state of perception and feeling; nausea |
| Cannabis |
Marijuana,
Hashish |
Euphoria; slowed thinking and reaction time; confusion; impaired balance
and coordination
|
| Inhalants |
Glue,
Poppers, Nitrous Oxide
|
Stimulation, loss of inhibition; headache, nausea or vomiting; slurred
speech; loss of motor coordination; wheezing
|
More detailed
descriptions and health effects of various substances can be found on
many websites, (see Websites to Check Out,
below) including the National Institute on Drug Abuse: http://www.drugabuse.gov/
and The Do It Now Foundation, a non-profit organization committed to drug
abuse prevention: http://www.doitnow.org.
Sexual activity
can be risky behavior for teens. Unintended pregnancy, STIs including
HIV, non-consensual sex, and the potentially negative emotional consequences
are a few of the risky outcomes teens experience when they become sexually
active. However, sexual activity under the influence of drugs, including
alcohol, can raise the stakes even higher. Consider the following:
- Teens often drink or use other drugs when they engage in sexual activity.
So perhaps it's not surprising that many young people lose their virginity
while drunk. Unfortunately, many teens who get drunk and have sex also
become pregnant because they aren't thinking about or able to use protection
at the time. (National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy's "Fact
Sheet: Sobering Facts on Alcohol and Teen Pregnancy," April, 2000)
- Thirteen
percent of teens say they've done something sexual while using alcohol
and other drugs that they might not have done if they had been sober.
("National survey of teens: Teens talk about dating, intimacy,
and their sexual experiences," Kaiser Family Foundation and YM
Magazine, 1998)
- Teens
who drink and smoke are more likely to hang out with teens they perceive
to be sexually "advanced" which usually results in
a higher level of sexual activity among those teens themselves. (Whitbeck,
et al., 1993)
Drug and
alcohol education has been practiced by educators in schools and other
youth settings for decades. However, despite the $2.1 billion spent on
"prevention," (abstinence from drugs) in 1999, government surveys
indicate that many teenagers still experiment with drugs.
Marsha Rosenbaum,
PhD, of the Drug Policy Alliance an institute dedicated to broadening
the debate and advancing a harm reduction perspective regarding drugs,
drug abuse, and drug policy believes that abstinence-only drug
education is unrealistic. She and others fear an abstinence-only approach
leaves teachers and parents with little to say to the 50% of teens who,
despite admonitions, have tried marijuana, and the 80% of teens who use
alcohol by the time they graduate from high school.
Rosenbaum
offers an alternative, a safety-first approach to drug education, which
requires reality-based assumptions about drug use. Safety-first drug education
stresses abstinence from drugs, but it doesn't stop there. It also includes
a fallback strategy for risk reduction. This strategy consists of providing
students with information and resources so they do the least possible
harm to themselves and others.
Safety-first
drug education assumes that teenagers can make responsible decisions if
given honest, science-based drug education. Another assumption of safety-first
drug education is that total abstinence may not be a realistic alternative
for all teenagers. One more assumption of safety-first drug education
is that the use of mind-altering substances does not necessarily constitute
abuse. With sexual activity and alcohol use, for example, teenagers must
understand the importance of context so that they can make wise decisions,
control their use, and stay safe and healthy.
Rosenbaum's
"How To's" of safety-first drug education include the following:
- Communication is key in safety-first drug education. The channels
of communication must be open, and listening to what teens have to say
is crucial. Rosenbaum is insistent in her belief that, if adults become
indignant and punitive, teenagers will stop talking.
- Discussions of drugs in safety-first drug education must include observations
and experience of the teens themselves if the program is to be credible.
Teens should feel safe from negative repercussions for their input and
honesty.
- Safety-first drug education should be age-specific, beginning in middle-
school, when teens are actually confronted with drugs. It should engage
students in the broad study of how drugs affect the body and mind. They
should also learn about the social context of drugs in America.
- Safety-first drug education teaches students the legal consequences
of drug use in America, acknowledging illegality as a risk factor in
and of itself. There are real, lasting consequences of using drugs and
being caught, including expulsion from school, denial of college loans,
a criminal record, and lasting stigma.
- The goals of realistic drug education focus on safety. Safety-first
education separates the real from the imagined dangers of substance
use.
- A comprehensive, reality-based drug education curriculum will equip
students with information they trust, which is the basis for making
responsible decisions.
As the demand for
reality-based drug education grows, programs are being developed in the
U.S. and abroad. A listing of such programs can be found at the web site
of the Drug Policy Alliance: www.drugpolicy.org.
According
to Rosenbaum, it's our responsibility as parents and teachers to engage
students and provide them with credible information so they can make responsible
decisions, avoid drug abuse, and stay safe.
- To download
pdf versions of Safety First: A Reality-Based Approach to Teens,
Drugs, and Drug Education, in four different languages or order
up to 50 copies in English or Spanish, go to: safety1st.org/.
- Drug Policy Alliance www.drugpolicy.org
- Harm Reduction Coalition www.harmreduction.org
- Fact Sheet: Sobering Facts on Alcohol and Teen Pregnancy The National
Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy www.teenpregnancy.org/alcohol.htm
- American Social Health Association (ASHA) Information on Teen Sexual
Health and STD Prevention www.iwannaknow.org/brain/brain2.html
- DanceSafe: Promoting health and safety within the rave and nightclub
community www.dancesafe.org
- The Do It Now Foundation, a 30-year old non-profit organization working
to prevent youth drug abuse www.doitnow.org
- Join Together Online www.jointogether.org
- Erowid, a small, not-for-profit organization dedicated to studying
and providing information about mind-altering substances www.erowid.org
- The Drug Dependence Research Center of the Langley Porter Psychiatric
Institute, University of California San Francisco, focuses on
the pharmacology and psychology of commonly abused drugs itsa.ucsf.edu/~ddrc/
- The Centre for Education and Information on Drugs and Alcohol (Australia)
www.ceida.net.au/
- NIDA Club Drugs Website www.clubdrugs.org
- Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) www.samhsa.gov
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment's National Helpline www.health.org
- Girl Power! Campaign Headquarters U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services www.health.org/gpower
- National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Keeping Kids Alcohol
Free Campaign www.niaaa.nih.gov
- The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University
www.casacolumbia.org
- From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything You Need to Know About Mind-Altering
Drugs (Updated)
Andrew Weil, MD, & Winifred Rosen
Houghton Mifflin Company, New York, 1993
- Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts: A Review of the Scientific Evidence
Lynn Zimmer & John P. Morgan
BookWorld Companies, 1997
- The Great Brain Robbery . . . What everyone should know about teenagers
and drugs
Tom Scott & Trevor Grice
The Publishing Trust
Wellington, New Zealand, 1996
| More Information/Resources |
- The Center for Educational Research and Development, an innovative
non-profit organization devoted to the healthy development of young
people and their families through programs, evaluation, research and
policy consultation, has a web site (www.cerd.org/)
containing several related articles including:
"Listen
to the Kids: When it comes to drug education, students confirm what
research says," by Joel H. Brown (www.cerd.org/books/drug02.html)
"Students
and Substances: Social Power in Drug Education," by Joel H. Brown, Marianne
D'Emidio-Caston, & John Pollard (www.cerd.org/books/drug03.html)
"In Their
Own Voices: Students and Educators Evaluate California School-Based
Drug, Alcohol, and Tobacco Education (DATE) Programs," a report written
by Joel H. Brown et al. (www.cerd.org/books/drug05.html)
- Youth risk behavior surveillance. National Alternative High School
Youth Risk Behavior Survey, United States, 1998. Journal of School
Health, 2000 Jan; 70 (1): 5-17, National Library of Medicine PubMed
- "Unprotected sex as a function of alcohol and marijuana use among
adolescent detainees." Kingree JB, Braithwaite R, Woodring T Rollins
School of Public Health of Emory University, Atlanta, GA. PubMed Services
- National Survey of teens: Teens talk about dating, intimacy, and their
sexual experiences. Kaiser Family Foundation and YM Magazine,
1998
- National Youth Crisis Hotline (operates 24 hours, seven days a week)
1-800-422-HOPE (4673)
- National Adolescent Health Information Center Division of Adolescent
Medicine University of California, San Francisco 1388 Sutter Street,
Suite 605A, San Francisco, CA 94109 (415) 502-4856
Check out
a New York Times article recently published about the Kaiser Family
Foundation survey which found that parents favor more detailed sex education
for their teens: www.nytimes.com/2000/10/04/national/04SEX.html
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