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©
2002 |
Survey
turns focus on substance abuse
Community activists and school
officials are sifting the results of a recent study to determine the real
degree of drug and alcohol use among Sisters youth.
Some numbers in the Department
of Education-sponsored survey were startling, but may offer a distorted
picture of how much drinking and drugging really goes on in Sisters.
One statistic that raised
eyebrows was the fact that 81 percent of 11th graders in Sisters have
tried alcohol, compared with an average of 73 percent across Oregon.
However, the figure for Sisters
students who had tried alcohol the previous year was 78 percent, indicating
that alcohol use among students is not rising dramatically -- in fact,
it has remained fairly constant.
High school counselor Debbie
Newport assessed the survey as a snapshot in time.
"This survey provides a snapshot
on how students on a particular day in April were feeling about drug and
alcohol use," she said.
Newport noted that the 81
percent figure had to do with whether students had ever tried alcohol
throughout their entire lives.
A more helpful statistic,
she noted, was that 41 percent of Sisters 11th graders reportedly had
used alcohol within the past 30 days (compared with 40 percent statewide.)
"This is where the problem
with alcohol abuse among students is," she said. "The real issue is the
problem of frequent substance abuse."
Additionally, the prior survey
year of 2000 reported that 61 percent of the juniors at Sisters High had
used alcohol within the past thirty days (45 percent statewide).
In other words, frequent alcohol
use among the high school population has actually dropped significantly
(from 61 percent in 2000 to 41 percent in 2001.)
While this drop in frequent
use may be an encouraging sign, the problem of teenage substance abuse
in Sisters remains.
The Community Action Team
of Sisters (CATS) is taking a role in addressing the issue.
"I knew there was a problem,"
said CATS director Lorri Craig. "I've had two kids go through the high
school here. I was naïve about the problem for a long time.
"When my kids would tell me
they were going camping, I'd think, 'That's great. They are experiencing
the great outdoors. What a wholesome activity.' I'd pack chocolate and
marshmallows and graham crackers so they could make s'mores.
"What I later learned is that
in Sisters 'camping' is a euphemism for 'partying'. Kids go drinking in
the woods. That's camping."
While alcohol remains the
drug of choice among Sisters youth, 30 percent reported that they have
used "other drugs" -- including Ecstasy, cocaine, LSD and amphetamines
at some point in their lives.
This represented a slight
drop from 33 percent in 2000.
Statewide, 17 percent of high
school 11th graders reported using other drugs, and this figure has remained
consistent the past two years.
The percentage of Sisters
High School juniors who reported having used other drugs during the past
30 days was 12 percent, down from 20 percent the previous year.
Across Oregon, 11 percent
of 11th graders reported using other drugs within the past 30 days in
each of the last two surveys.
One alarming statistic was
that among sixth graders in Sisters, 9 percent admitted using inhalants
in the last 30 days, up from 4 percent the previous year.
Statewide, 5 percent of sixth
graders reported using inhalants on a frequent basis in 2001, down from
7 percent in 2000.
The relatively small number
of students in the Sisters School District allows for greater fluctuation
in the survey results.
"We have such a small population
that a few skewed answers can present a false view," said Superintendent
Steve Swisher. "But the point should not be lost about the seriousness
and prevalence of drug use among the student population."
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