Drug Abuse Among Runaway and Homeless Youth |
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Drug Abuse Among Runaway and Homeless YouthDrug Abuse among young people living in shelters or on the streets is more widespread than was thought - sometimes with tragic consequences.
These are among the findings from three National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) -funded studies that profile substance abuse among runaway and homeless youths. In an analysis of three national surveys of substance abuse among youths ages 12 to 21 who had run away or been homeless at some point in their lives, Dr. Christopher Ringwalt, Jody Greene, and their colleagues at Research Triangle Institute in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, found that:
"These very high rates of drug abuse underscore the critical need for intervention and drug addiction treatment services for runaway and homeless youths - a need that is not being adequately met," Dr. Ringwalt says. His work was supported by NIDA and the Administration on Children, Youth, and Families of the Department of Health and Human Services. "But in planning interventions, we can\t consider runaways and homeless kids as a single, homogeneous population," he points out. "As our data show, their rates of drug abuse vary widely depending on age, gender, ethnicity, and current living circumstances - street, shelter, or in a household on and off. Service providers need to take these differences into account when planning interventions." "For example, to better reach street kids, service providers might increase the number and visibility of mobile vans and outreach staff and locate storefronts with street-wise staff in areas where youths congregate," Dr. Ringwalt says. Dr. Michele Kipke and her colleagues at Childrens Hospital in Los Angeles found similar high rates of drug abuse in a survey of 432 homeless young people in Hollywood, California. The youths, aged 13 to 23, were recruited from clinics, shelters, and street hangouts. Among the major findings:
"Our data show that alcohol abuse and drug abuse is a pervasive and debilitating problem among street kids," Dr. Kipke says. "Special efforts are needed to hook up these kids with treatment services and other kinds of help such as life skills and job training. Some of them may need a pretreatment stage where their immediate crises are addressed through sheltering services and short-term detoxification." These contrasts in drug use among youths living on the streets compared
"However, our study also suggests that those who need treatment the most may be the hardest to reach given their more chronic pattern of homelessness." A particular risk for runaway and homeless youths who abuse drugs is suicide, according to another study by Dr. Ringwalt and his colleagues. In a nationwide, multicity survey of 640 youths in shelters and 600 living on the street, the researchers found that some 25 percent of the shelter youths and nearly one-third of the street youths had tried to kill themselves at least once in their lives. In both groups, those who had abused drugs - especially sedatives, hallucinogens, and inhalants - were far more likely than nonusers to have attempted suicide. For example, among street youths, 52.1 percent of those who abused sedatives had attempted suicide, while 25.6 percent of those who did not abuse sedatives had tried to kill themselves. An interesting finding was that runaways and homeless youths with substance-abusing family members were twice as likely as those without such family members to have tried suicide. This association remained significant even after taking into account the youths\' own substance abuse. "This finding adds to the scientific evidence that family substance abuse has a profound adverse effect on children," Dr. Ringwalt says. "It points to the need to focus suicide prevention efforts on runaway and homeless kids who use drugs and also have drug abuse in their families." The study shows the need for more aggressive outreach strategies to make comprehensive drug abuse treatment services more accessible to runaway and homeless youths. |
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