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UK: Drug use is widespread in schools, says survey

Nicholas Pyke

Independent on Sunday

Sunday 21 Nov 2004

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Drug abuse is widespread at British secondary schools, according to a
survey of more than 1,000 teenage girls. Seventy-one per cent told a poll
by CosmoGirl that cannabis was regularly used at their schools, despite a
wealth of anti-drug messages from the Government.

The poll shows that a third of its readers smoke, says the magazine, while
more than half drink, most of them illegally - results which will dismay
ministers whose recently published White Paper on health attempts to cut
down consumption of both tobacco and alcohol.

The teenagers did, though, support the proposal for a ban on smoking in
public places. They also backed the idea of random drug testing in school -
a process which remains illegal in state-funded schools, but already takes
place in the private sector.

Forty-nine per cent of the readers had never smoked and 83 per cent say
they have never taken drugs. But nearly one in 10 teenagers smoke every day
while a further 26 per cent do so occasionally, and 41 per cent take drugs
- mostly cannabis.

There was no lack of knowledge, with 70 per cent fully acknowledging the
risks of substance abuse.

The editor of CosmoGirl, Miranda Eason, said: "This survey shows that
teenagers are highly aware of the dangers of drugs but there is still a
worrying number exposing themselves to these damaging substances because
they are surrounded by temptation and filled with teenage curiosity."




 

 

 

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