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For Many Youth, Summer Means First-Time Substance Use

Source: SAMHSA News: July/August 2004

 


Summertime. No more pencils, no more books. Longer days and good weather for swimming, baseball, camping, or for a family trip to the beach. And what else is going on?

            According to a new report from SAMHSA’s 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, June and July are top months for first-time use of both marijuana and cigarettes by young people.

            The study, Seasonality of Youth’s First-Time Use of Marijuana , Cigarettes, or Alcohol, focused on youth under age 18 who initiated use of marijuana, cigarettes, or alcohol within the year preceding the survey.

            Respondents were asked to indicate the month in which they first used each of these substances.

            Percentages of first-time users of marijuana, cigarettes and alcohol increased between spring (April and :May) and summer (June and July).

            Specifically, among marijuana initiates, first use was highest during June and July (11 percent per month), compared with just 8 percent per month during April and May. November (7 percent) and December (6 percent) had the lowest percentages.

            According to the SAMHSA report, June and July, compared to the rest of the year, show a 40-percent increase in first-time marijuana use among youth. Each day in these two summer months, and average of 6,300 youth try marijuana for the first time.

            First-time cigarette users were more likely to begin use during June (13 percent) and July (12 percent) than during other months, increasing from 7 percent per month during April and May.

            February (5 percent) and December (5 percent) had the lowest percentages of youth initiating use pf cigarettes.

First use of alcohol was highest during December (13 percent), January (13 percent), June (12 percent), and July (12 percent).

The percentage of youth alcohol initiates increased from 6 percent per month during April and May to 12 percent per month during June and July. February had the lowest percentage (5 percent) of youth initiating the use of alcohol.

To order Seasonality of Youth’s First-Time Use of Marijuana, Cigarettes, or Alcohol, contact The National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information at P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, MD 20847-2345. Telephone 1 (800) 729-6686 (English or Spanish) or 1 (800) 487-4889 (TDD). The report can be downloaded from the SAMHSA Web sight at www.oas.samhsa.gov.

 


In related report on young people, substance abuse, and driving, OAS data show that young drivers age 15 to 17 in states with the most restrictive driver licensing laws had lower rates of heavy drinking than those in states with the least restrictive laws.

States vary in the extent to which they restrict driving behavior among young drivers. This report identifies the states categorized from the most restrictive to the least restrictive according to the 4-category rating scheme developed by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety and Traffic Injury Research Foundation.

For an outline copy of Graduated Driving Licensing and Drinking among Young Drivers, go to www.oas.samhsa.gov.

 

 

For more information, contact

 

The Alliance for the Mentally Ill

NAMI of Greater Chicago

1536 West Chicago Avenue

Chicago, IL  60622

(312) 563-0445

Fax 312-563-0467

namigc@aol.com

www.namigc.org