Methamphetamine use by Twin Cities area high school seniors fell to 2 percent, but other illegal drugs, including marijuana, Ecstasy and LSD are becoming more popular among 12th graders, the state Department of Human Services said Monday.
That was down from 5 percent in 2004, and similar declines were found among ninth graders and statewide, the department said in a report based on two surveys of secondary and college students. It also includes data from government databases, hospital emergency rooms and treatment centers.
Carol Falkowski, director of the department's Chemical Health Division, said the data doesn't necessarily mean meth use is down overall, since the statistics are just indicators of what's happening in specific populations. But she said it is possible that meth abuse is finally stalling, or even dropping.
"I think what's encouraging is that we started to see these declines since 2006, and they're continuing to go down," she said.
Falkowski credited pressure from law enforcement for a good share of the apparent methamphetamine decline. Meth seizures continue to outnumber all other illegal drug seizures in the state at 35 percent.
But the report also revealed some troubling trends. Falkowski said Ecstasy use grew from 4 percent in 2004 to 6 percent last year.
"Now it appears that there's a resurgence in the Ecstasy supply, and that the source of that Ecstasy is — somewhat surprisingly — Canada," Falkowski said. "Even cities as far south as Miami are seeing renewed supplies of Ecstasy."
Marijuana use rose 4 percentage points from three years ago to 33 percent of seniors, and LSD use rose from 5 percent in 2004 to 6 percent last year, the student survey found.
Falkowski said she was surprised to see that LSD is becoming more popular. Many people who grew up in the 1960s probably know someone who was significantly harmed by the hallucinogen, she said, but that appears forgotten now.
"Forty years later, we have this generational forgetting and kids are using it again, because it is a drug that can have long-term psychological consequences," she said. "But maybe each generation needs to learn that on their own."
![]() Get A ProfessionalFind home maintenance, car repair, legal advice, cleaning, and more in the Yellow Pages. Go now! |
Win tickets to The Midnight Movie Society's screening of "Clue" at Red Stag Supperclub.Vita.mn and DJ Jake Rudh present the first meeting of The Midnight Movie Society at Red Stag Supperclub on Dec. 4, with drinking, dancing and a midnight screening of cult-classic film, "Clue." |
Comment on this story | Be the first to comment | Hide reader comments