"Girls want to
do what older guys are doing or they want to be cool," said
Meghan Ward, 18, a volunteer in a Connecticut community service
group called Peer Advocates. "Girls do feel a lot of stress
-- everything from school, to most of us work, we have boyfriends
and we want to maintain good friendships. It's hard."
The results came as something of
a surprise to John Walters, director of the White House program,
since illegal drug use by children ages 12 to 17 has fallen 19 percent
in the past 5 years, a statistic President Bush touted in his recent
State of the Union address.
"We want to make sure we continue
the decline and deal effectively with the current circumstance,"
Walters said in an interview.
While some progress has been made,
the administration statistic misses the fact that the use of alcohol
and prescription drugs is rising, said Joseph A. Califano Jr., chairman
of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia
University.
"We have not done a good job
of keeping alcohol and drugs out of the hands of kids," he
said. In Columbia's latest survey, 42 percent of teenagers reported
they would have no trouble purchasing marijuana in a day. "That's
11 million kids."
In 2002, 2003 and 2004, girls exceeded
boys as first-time marijuana smokers, and they far surpass young
men when it comes to prescription drug abuse, according to the government
survey. In 2004, the last year for which data are available, 1.5
million girls began drinking, 730,000 started smoking cigarettes
and 675,000 began smoking marijuana.
Califano, who is releasing a book
today titled "Women Under the Influence," criticized Bush's
proposal to trim drug prevention and treatment programs while increasing
law enforcement in those areas.
"The only way to get hooked
is to use, so prevention funds are very, very important," he
said.
Califano and Seigel said adolescent
girls develop addictions more easily and are more prone to depression
than their male counterparts. The White House report cited studies
that indicate that girls who used marijuana daily were five times
more likely to face depression in young adulthood.
In many cases, concerns over weight
and self-esteem factor heavily in girls' decisions to smoke or use
prescription drugs. Laura Thurston, a senior at Sheehan High School
outside New Haven, Conn., knows cheerleaders who are thin but nevertheless
take diet pills.
Magazines, reality television and
movies portray young female celebrities as successful, thin -- and
drug users, said Jessica Morales, another member of Peer Advocates.
"Girls are more vulnerable to those stereotypes," she
said.
Young girls even face increased pressure
from the beverage industry, said Craig Turner, director of youth
and social services in Wallingford, Conn. "They've been creating
new products specifically geared toward women," he said. "They're
called alcopops -- fruit-flavored drinks, enhanced lemonades, flavored
hard liquors. Where taste alone used to deter kids, they like the
taste of these."
Many people complain that parents
are neglecting their responsibilities. In his 14 years as a therapist
at the Cross Creek Manor specialty boarding school in southern Utah,
Garth Lasater said he has seen "a sharp decline in the family;
more and more kids left alone."
In Connecticut, more parents are
allowing young people to drink in their homes -- as long as they
do not drive, said members of Peer Advocates. But as Morales put
it: Adults should "stop acting cool and act more like a parent."
-----------------------------------------------
Click
here to go back
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/08/AR2006020802228.html
|