This is an interesting study released by
Phoenix House, one of the largest "drug treatment" facilities in the country.
Among other things it shows that fewer than 1% of drug users got started by
connecting to a professional drug dealer. It seems the myth of the pusher
hanging around the schoolyard is just that... a myth.
One in Five Drug Abusers
Needing Treatment Did Drugs With Parents, Phoenix
House Study Finds;
Families, Not Drug Dealers, Turned Youths On
NEW
YORK, Aug. 24 /PRNewswire/ -- One in five drug abusers in treatment
used
illegal drugs with their parents, and most did so before the age of 18,
a new
survey has found. This survey, supported by earlier research,
makes clear
that parents sharing illegal drugs with their children is a
significant, and
largely unrecognized phenomenon.
Strikingly, study
findings explode the myth of the schoolyard "pusher," that
shadowy figure
pressing drugs on unwary youths.
According to the survey, conducted by
Penn, Schoen & Berland Associates at
Phoenix House treatment programs
throughout the country, candidates for drug
treatment are nineteen times more
likely to have been introduced to illicit
drugs by a family member than by a
professional drug dealer. And they are
five times more likely to have
been "turned on" to drugs by a parent than by
a dealer.
Similar levels
of parent-teen drug sharing was found among whites, blacks and
Hispanics and
there was little difference between urban and
suburban
residents.
According to Mitchell S. Rosenthal M.D., a child
psychiatrist and president
of Phoenix House, survey findings reflect the fact
that after more than 30
years of widespread drug use in the United States,
many parents today regard
teenage drug use as no more than a youthful rite of
passage.
"These findings should disturb everyone involved in preventing
drug use among
kids," Dr. Rosenthal said. "It's shocking to discover
that one drug abuser
in five did drugs with their parents. And one in
five say they received
their first drugs -- not from some pusher on the
street -- but from a family
member."
"The study tells us, "We have met
the neighborhood drug pusher and he is us,"
Dr. Rosenthal
added.
"There are significant policy implications to the study,"
according to Dr.
Rosenthal. "Most drug prevention and education
campaigns urge parents to
talk to their children about the dangers of
drugs. Yet, we see here that
many parents are far from being what a
current television prevention campaign
calls 'the anti-drug.'
"The
influence of parents are a double-edged sword," Dr. Rosenthal said. "We
have
to remember what kids are hearing and seeing at home is as varied as
the
parents they live with. And after more than three decades of
widespread drug
use in America, many parents have spent much of their lives
as users
themselves. We also hope that these results will spur policy
makers to take
a new look at the importance of drug treatment in helping
adolescents become
drug-free."
Douglas Schoen, partner in the firm of
Penn, Schoen and Berland, which serves
the White House, among other clients,
said: "This survey is startling and
extraordinary in a number of ways.
First, it gives us an insight into what
happens behind closed doors in all
too many American families.
"Second, by applying the public opinion
research methodology usually used by
politicians and corporations to address
the drug problem, we can clearly hear
the voices of the ultimate experts --
drug users themselves."
The survey found:
. Twenty percent of the people seeking treatment at
Phoenix House used
drugs with their parents, and 59 percent of them used
drugs with their
parents before the age of 18.
. Of those who used drugs with their parents 76
percent reported using
marijuana, 19 percent used crack, 16 percent used
cocaine, and
6 percent used heroin.
. Nineteen percent were introduced to drug use by
family members:
9 percent by siblings, 5 percent by parents, 4 percent by
uncles,
aunts, cousins, and 1 percent by spouses.
. The study found that fewer than 1 percent had been
introduced to drugs
by a professional dealer. Interviews with
former users and former
dealers now in treatment across the country
support this finding.
. Tracking parent-teen drug sharing, 22 percent of
whites reported that
they had used drugs other than alcohol with their
parents; 18 percent
of blacks said they had used drugs other than alcohol
with their
parents and 22 percent of Hispanics said they had used drugs
other than
alcohol with their parents.
. Among urban residents 22 percent said they had
done drugs other than
alcohol with their parents, as compared to 17
percent of suburban
residents.
Phoenix House commissioned Penn,
Schoen & Berland Associates, Inc. to survey
a random sample of current
residents at Phoenix House drug treatment programs
in four states: New York,
California, Florida and Texas. The survey of 582
respondents was
conducted in April 2000 and involved a representative sample
of the more than
5,000 residents of 70 Phoenix House programs across the
nation.
Residents responded to 80 questions about their drug history and
their views
on substance abuse treatment and policy issues.
Survey findings were
confirmed by interviews conducted at Phoenix House
treatment programs around
the United States and are substantiated by findings
about children and teens
in research conducted for the Partnership for a
Drug-Free
America.
Phoenix House is the nation's leading, private, non-profit
substance abuse
treatment, prevention and education agency. Each day,
Phoenix House provides
substance abuse treatment to nearly 5,000 adults and
adolescents in eight
states.
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