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Study:
Random Drug Testing Is Effective
December,
2002
PORTLAND, Ore.
(AP) - Student-athletes subject to random drug testing at an Oregon
high school were almost four times less likely to use drugs than
their counterparts at a similar school who were not tested, a study
shows.
The one-year
pilot study by researchers at Oregon Health & Sciences University
compared Wahtonka High School in The Dalles, where all student-athletes
were subject to random testing, and Warrenton High School, a demographically
similar school near Astoria, where they were not.
Of the 135 athletes
subject to the random testing at Wahtonka, only 5.3 percent said
they were using illicit drugs by the end of the school year, versus
19.4 percent of the 141 athletes at Warrenton.
They also were
three times less likely to use performance-enhancing substances
like steroids, according to the survey responses, which were confidential.
The study, conducted
during the 1999-2000 school year, was funded by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse, an arm of the National Institutes of Health. The
results are published in next month's Journal of Adolescent Health.
``The differences
between the schools were dramatic,'' said Dr. Linn Goldberg, a lead
researcher in the study. ``And the differences between the non-athletes
(who were not tested at either school but who filled out questionnaires
about drug use) were not significantly there'' - 32.2 percent at
Warrenton and 26.6 percent at Wahtonka.
The study comes
six months after the issue was thrown into the spotlight by the
U.S. Supreme Court. In June, the court ruled that children attending
public schools can be required to participate in drug testing if
they join any competitive after-school activity, from football to
chess.
Merry Holland,
principal at Wahtonka, said the school has continued to test athletes
since the study ended.
She said she
believes the program has helped curb drug use. But, she said, the
drug testing has also led some students to switch to substances
that are more difficult to track, like beer.
``There are
a lot of parties with alcohol,'' she said. ``If they want to stay
with sports, and participate, they might switch to something they
think is harder to detect.''
Over the past
few years, about 5 percent of schools nationwide have required that
athletes be drug tested. About two percent have tested students
in other activities.
The Oregon pilot
study is the forerunner of a wider, three-year study at 13 Oregon
high schools.
Dubbed SATURN,
for Student Athlete Testing Using Random Notification, the wider
study is meant to examine whether the threat of testing really keeps
kids away from drugs. It was suspended in its third year after a
federal agency expressed concerns about some of the methodology
used in the study's latter two years.
The Office of
Human Research Policy said the study violated a number of federal
regulations by not properly obtaining informed consent from children
or protecting research subjects from coercive environments. The
survey results used in the published study were not affected.
OHSU issued
a response this month offering to better ensure student confidentiality,
to stop using principals and coaches to solicit participation in
some schools and to end financial incentives for participating schools.
Goldberg said researchers are awaiting word on whether the study
will be reinstated.
Copyright
2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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