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| National
Synopsis:
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 "In
the 27 years that the MTF (Monitoring the Future) study has collected
data, past year prevalence rates for self-reported marijuana use by
seniors peaked at 50.8 percent in 1979 and declined to a low of 21.9
percent in 1992. Since then, it reached a relative maximum of 38.5 percent
in 1997 and is now at 37.0 percent in 2001."
(Smoking among teenagers decreases sharply and increase in ecstasy use slows, December 19, 2001)-Monitoring
The Future Press Releases
Monitoring the Future:
The University of Michigan's Monitoring the Future Survey
has been tracking substance abuse among youth for the past 27 years. It is
the most widely national survey of youth drug use statistics. The most
recent study included nearly 44,000 students in some 424 public and
private secondary schools, trend data are reported for 12th graders since 1975 and
for eighth graders since 1991.
The most recent study was released on December 19, 2001.
Key findings sited in the press
release
include:
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Illicit drug use by secondary students is finally
heading down after six years of steady increases.
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Some teenagers see an increased risk in occasional use
of marijuana.
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Marijuana, the most widely used of the illicit drugs,
accounted for most of the increase in overall illicit drug use during
the 90's and now accounts for much of the observed decrease. There was
some gradual downward movement in all three grades in those reporting
any use of marijuana in the prior 12 months.
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Marijuana use is still widespread. This year, nearly a
quarter of eighth-graders said they had tried marijuana, and about
half of all 12th graders said they had done so.
Additional data tables and figures are available at the Monitoring
the Future website.
The following Hot Quotes show that though drug use
appears to be leveling off, we still have a long way to go in our
education and prevention efforts. It is also important note that only one
year ago, a survey found that drugs were the number one concern for both
parents and youth alike!

"Authorities have made dozens of drug arrests
recently along Interstate 20 in East Texas, which they say is increasingly
becoming a corridor for narcotics traffic." (Drug arrests
increase on I-20, MSNBC, December 17, 2001)
"The survey results, released Wednesday, show that
drugs remain U.S. teens' No.1 concern. And fewer youths - 51 percent -
expect to totally abstain from future drug use than in 1999, when 61
percent expected to abstain. More also believe it's easier to buy pot than
cigarettes." (Marijuana easy to get, teens say, The
Cincinnati Enquirer, February 22, 2001)
(Hot
Quotes from 1998)
(Hot
Quotes from before 1998)
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