Showing posts with label 2010 WA Drug Abuse Trends Report. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010 WA Drug Abuse Trends Report. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Youth substance abuse treatment: need outweighs availability


In Washington State, 13,375 adolescents (ages 12-17) who were eligible for state-funded substance abuse treatment did not receive treatment.  This means that 67% of young teenagers who qualify, both clinically and financially, for publicly-funded substance abuse treatment did not get the services they needed because of limits of available funding.  (Source: 2010 Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Abuse Trends in Washington State, page 222)

Marijuana use rates among WA high school seniors increases, higher than national average


Though the rates of marijuana use among Washington State high school seniors dropped between 2000-2003, it has steadily increased since then.  (Source: 2010 Tobacco, Alcohol, and Other Drug Abuse Trends in Washington State, page 41.)

As I posted yesterday about 2010 Healthy Youth Survey results, fewer Washington State students perceive that it is risky to use marijuana.  Research has shown that as perceptions of risk decrease, use increases.

I don't want to suggest that Seattle policy affects the rest of the state, but I do want to point out that I-75, the Seattle initiative that made marijuana the city's lowest law-enforcement priority, was passed in 2003.  Last year, Washington legalized marijuana for medical purposes. Currently, our state is in the midst of a debate about marijuana legalization.  A research-based risk factor for youth substance abuse is community norms favorable to drugs.  As we continue our conversations about marijuana policy, it behooves us to consider what messages our children are getting from them.