UK children taking ecstasy and cannabis: Survey
London: In a shocker, an official survey has revealed that British children as young as seven are taking ecstasy and cannabis.
London: In a shocker, an official survey has revealed that British children as young as seven are taking ecstasy and cannabis.
The government's annual crime survey showed that nine-year-olds are also trying cocaine and often it is because their parents are failing to control them.
The survey has shown for the first time the youngest users of the most popular drugs in Britain - cannabis, ecstasy and cocaine, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
They found almost one in three who have ever smoked cannabis first tried it when they were under 16.
"The most commonly reported age for first taking cannabis was 16 years. But, as expected, there was a lot of variation among adults in the age cannabis was reported to be first taken, ranging from eight to 56 years old," the report says.
Around 6 per cent of those who had ever taken Class A cocaine took it first at school and 8.2 per cent had taken ecstasy before they turned 16.
Jeremy Todd, chief executive of the charity Family Lives, said "We speak to thousands of families every year and evidence shows that parents are the main influence on how children approach drugs and alcohol.
Equipping parents with the tools to ensure they can talk effectively with their children is the best way of preventing children experimenting at an early age and can prevent later problems in teenage and adult life."
The survey highlighted that the age of onset was most commonly 18 for cocaine powder, but again this was within a wide range of reported ages, from nine to 57 years old. Cannabis use has dropped the most, while there have been reductions in ecstasy and cocaine compared with the 1990s.
High school children taking drugs is down 12 per cent and the number of under-16s trying cigarettes is at its lowest for 30 years, the report said.
http://zeenews.india.com 27/07/2012