- Young Brains at Risk of Damage from Heavy Drinking
- Liquor Company Objects to Racing Sponsorship
- Bipartisan Bond Over Addiction Recovery
- ADHD Drug Abuse Gets Colleges' Attention
- Report Shows Healthy Decline in Smoking During Pregnancy
- Study: Harm Reduction Most Effective in Curbing College Drinking
- Untrained Docs Fail to Recommend Effective Stop-Smoking Therapies
- Counseling Curbs Heavy College Drinking, Researchers Say
- Spitzer to Seek Tobacco Taxes from Tribes
- Smokeless Tobacco Poses Challenge for Stop-Smoking Advocates
- Alcohol Researchers Identify a Genetic Basis of Pain Response
- Majority of Young Adults Who Use Prescription Pain Relievers Nonmedically Obtain the Drugs Free from a Friend or Relative
- Study Shows Most Treatment Effective Against Alcoholism
- Ecstasy: Too Often a Fatal Trip
- Class-Action Status Sought in 'Light' Cigarette Case
ADHD Students Prescribed Stimulant Medications Less Likely to Abuse Other Drugs
Students who take prescription stimulant medications to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) report relatively low rates of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, and ecstasy use compared to students who illicitly use prescription stimulants, according to a recent study of Detroit middle and high school students.
One in ten (9.8%) students who used stimulant medications (i.e. Ritalin®, Dexedrine®, or Adderall®) as prescribed for them also reported past year marijuana use, a rate similar to that of non-stimulant users (13.6%). In contrast, nearly one-half (47.8%) of students who reported using prescription stimulants both licitly and illicitly and nearly 70% of students who reported only illicit use of prescription stimulants also reported using marijuana in the past year .
Similar patterns were found for past month cigarette use and for past year alcohol and ecstasy use. According to the authors, "our findings provide evidence that middle and high school students who properly use prescribed stimulant medication for ADHD are not athigher risk for substance misuse."
For details, including data charts, source information and caveats, download the PDF file at www.cesar.umd.edu/cesar/cesarfax/vol14/14-11.pdf.
Reprinted from CESAR Fax, a weekly, one-page overview of timely substance abuse trends or issues, from The Center on Substance Abuse Research (CESAR) at the University of Maryland.



