The U.S. had the second-lowest proportion of students who smoke
cigarettes and drink alcohol in comparison to their counterparts in 36
European countries, a new study indicates. The results originate from
coordinated school investigations about substance use from more than
100,000 students in some of the largest countries in Europe like
Germany, France and Italy, as well as many smaller ones from both
Eastern and Western Europe. Because the methods and new measures are
largely simplified after the University of Michigan's Monitoring the
Future surveys in this country, comparisons are possible between the
U.S. and European results.
The 15- and 16-year-old students, who
were drawn in nationally representative samples in almost all of the 36
countries, were surveyed last spring. American 10th graders in the 2011
Monitoring the Future studies are of the same age, so comparisons are
possible. The differences found between adolescent behaviors in the U.S.
and Europe is dramatic, according to Lloyd Johnston, the principal
investigator of the American study. About 27 percent of American
students drank alcohol during the 30 days prior to the survey. Only
Iceland was lower at 17 percent, and the average rate in the 36 European
countries was 57 percent, more than twice the rate in the U.S. The
proportion of American students smoking cheap cigarettes
in the month prior to the study was 12 per cent—again the second lowest
in the rankings and again only Iceland had a lower rate at 10 percent.
For all European countries the average proportion smoking was 28
percent, more than twice the rate in the U.S. "One of the reasons that
smoking and drinking rates among adolescents are so much lower here than
in Europe is that both behaviors have been declining and have reached
historically low levels in the U.S. over the 37-year life of the
Monitoring the Future study," Johnston said.
"But even in the
earlier years of the European surveys, drinking and smoking by American
adolescents was quite low by comparison. "Use of illicit drugs is quite a
different matter." The U.S. students tend to have among the highest Style smoking rates
of use of all of the countries. At 18 percent, the U.S. ranks third of
37 countries on the proportion of students using marijuana or hashish in
the prior 30 days. Only France and Monaco had higher rates at 24
percent and 21 percent, respectively. The average across all the
European countries was 7 percent, or less than half the rate in the U.S.
American students reported the highest level of marijuana availability
of all the countries and the lowest proportion of students associating
great risk with its use —factors that may help to explain their
relatively high rates of use here, according to Johnston. The U.S. ranks
first in the proportion of students using any illicit drug other than
marijuana in their lifetime (16 percent compared to an average of 6
percent in Europe) and using hallucinogens like LSD in their lifetime (6
percent vs. 2 percent in Europe).
It also ranks first in the
proportion reporting ecstasy use in their lifetime (7 percent vs. 3
percent in Europe), despite a sharp drop in their ecstasy use over the
previous decade. American students have the highest the proportion
reporting lifetime use of amphetamines (9 percent), a rate that is three
times the average in Europe (3 percent). Ecstasy was seen as more
available in the U.S. than in any other country.
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