The Monitoring the Future Survey is one of three major
surveys that provide information on substance use among youth in the United
States. The other two surveys are the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse
(NHSDA) and the Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS). Monitoring the Future is
conducted by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research and
funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of the National
Institutes of Health.
Monitoring the Future has tracked 12th
graders' illicit drug use and attitudes toward drugs since 1975. In 1991, 8th-
and 10th-graders were added to the study. The 2007 study surveyed about 50,000
students in 400 schools across the U.S.
Questions in the survey
ask about the teen's lifetime use (at least once during life), past year use
(at least once in the previous year), past month use (at least once in past
month), and daily use of drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and smokeless tobacco. The
survey also contains questions about the teen's perception and attitudes toward
drug use, such as perception of harm from use, disapproval of others who take
drugs, and perceived availability of drugs.
Although there is a
broad decline in the use of drugs among teens in recent years, substance abuse
still remains a widespread problem for American young people. Today half have
tried an illicit drug by the time they finish high school, and nearly a third
have tried some illicit drug other than marijuana by the end of 12th
grade.
Drinking and illicit drug abuse are leading causes of
health and social problems and accidents leading to injury or death among young
people. The long-term consequences of smoking and drug and alcohol abuse
include long-term health and social problems that begin in the teen years but
carry on into adulthood.
This survey reveals general trends in
use and attitudes among teens. Some findings from the 2007 survey
follow.1
Cigarettes and smokeless tobacco
In 2007, about 8%
of 8th-graders, 14% of 10th-graders, and 22% of 12th-graders reported smoking
in the last 30 days. Although many adolescents still smoke, the number who do
has been decreasing steadily since peak levels in the mid-1990s. (But this
important trend is slowing down in the lower grades.) Teen use of smokeless
tobacco also continues to decrease, down by about one-half from the peak levels
reached in the mid-1990s.
Alcohol
Alcohol use remains widespread among today's
teenagers. Nearly 4 out of 5 students (77%) have consumed alcohol (more than
just a few sips) by the end of high school. Nearly half have done so by 8th
grade.
In 2007, about 16% of 8th-graders, 33% of 10th-graders,
and 44% of 12th-graders reported that they had drunk alcohol in the past 30
days.
Inhalants
Use of inhalants is decreasing among 8th-
and 12th-graders. After a period of several years of decline for all three
grade levels, annual reported inhalant use among 10th-graders rose in 2007. It
is possible this may indicate a "generational forgetting" about the dangers of
this type of drug.
Illicit drugs
Teen use of illicit drugs depends on
several factors, including how widely the effects of the drug's "high" are
recognized, how favorable the reports of its supposed benefits are, how risky
the use of it is seen to be, how acceptable it is in the peer group, and how
accessible it is in the peer group.
Use of illicit drugs has been
declining in all three grades since 2001, and current levels of illicit drug
use among 12th-graders are well below the highest levels of the late 1970s and
early 1980s. Despite the decline, illicit drug use continues to be prevalent in
all three grades.
- Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit
substance. In the last year, 6% of 8th-graders, 14% of 10th-graders, and 19% of
12th-graders reported that they had used it. Marijuana use has been declining
since it reached a peak in all three grades in 1996 and 1997. In 2002 and 2007,
the number of students who reported using marijuana decreased
significantly.
- The use of ecstasy (MDMA) increased steeply between
1998 and 2001 but has begun to drop sharply in all three grades. From its 2001
peak rates, the number of students who reported using ecstasy in the past year
declined a total of 40% among 8th-graders, 42% among 10th-graders, and 51%
among 12th-graders. In 2007, less than 2% of 8th-graders, 4% of 10th-graders,
and 5% of 12th-graders reported that they had used ecstasy in the past
year.
- Heroin use had a steep increase in all three grades during
the 1990s and, with some fluctuations, has been decreasing since 2001. In 2007,
the annual use rate for all three grades was reported at close to
1%.
- In 2007, 2% of 8th-graders, 3% of 10th-graders, and 5% of
12th-graders reported using some form of cocaine in the last year. In the
mid-1970s until the mid-1980s, cocaine use was at an all-time high with
reported annual use at about 12% for 12th-graders. Use declined steadily until
the early 1990s when annual use rates were below 4% for all grade levels. Use
rose until the late 1990s and has been declining since then.
- Use of
LSD has been declining steadily since data collection began. In 2007, LSD use
was at about 1% for 8th-graders and about 2% for both 10th- and
12th-graders.
- Use of amphetamines is declining, with annual use
rates for all three grades between 4% and 8%.
- Use of
methamphetamines has been declining gradually for several years for all three
grades. Use rates for all three grades are around 2%.
- Use of
hallucinogens other than LSD (such as mushrooms) has declined slightly since
2001 in all three grades, with annual use rates at about 2% for 8th-graders, 4%
for 10th-graders, and 5% for 12th-graders.
- Club drugs such as
flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB), and ketamine all have
relatively low prevalence-of-use rates among secondary students (with annual
rates of less than 1% to 2%) and are holding steady.
- Use of
anabolic steroids has fluctuated between 1% and about 2% in all three grade
levels over the past several years with much higher rates for boys and
different use rates in different grades. Overall rates for boys in all three
grades are between about 2% and 3%.