Illicit drug use among urban adolescents. A decade in retrospect
K. Hein, M. I. Cohen and I. F. Litt
Over the past decade (1967 to 1977), 76,000 adolescents were screened for a
history and somatic signs of illicit drug use at a detention center for
juveniles and at an adolescent inpatient unit of a university-affiliated
hospital. Dramatic changes in the patterns of drug abuse are reported.
Opiate use was prominent in the first half of the decade with a peak in
1970 to 1971 and marijuana use more prominent in the last five years.
Inhalant abuse as represented by glue and halogenated cleaning fluids was
documented only early in the decade, while the existence of stimulant and
depressant abuse follows still other patterns over the decade. Hospital
admissions for serious somatic complications of illicit drug use, namely,
overdose, drug-related death, hepatic coma, detoxification, and viral
hepatitis, were correlated only with trends in the use of opiates.
Awareness of drug abuse patterns among adolescents is important for the
health professional so that complications can be diagnosed and treated and
educational efforts properly directed.