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We design personalized treatment programs to provide each abuser with the greatest chance of a successful recovery outcome. Our comprehensive networking system works hand in hand with all of the drug treatment centers in Michigan. At Drug Rehab Michigan we know that each individual is unique and are treated as such. Deciding upon a treatment option in Michigan, or anywhere can be a daunting task for any individual or family, we will guide you through each step of a comprehensive treatment plan for you or your loved one. We are determined in our mission, that every drug and/or alcohol abuser in Michigan. that has a desire to change their life will be given a chance to recover from their addiction and we are dedicated to ensuring that they are given the opportunity to do so.

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Mixed signs emerge in teen drug survey taken in Michigan

Michigan teens are using fewer illicit drugs than they were a year ago, according to an annual University of Michigan research survey released today, but use of several classes of drugs failed to decline among the youngest surveyed, a sign researchers caution could point to a new wave of drug use. And illicit use of prescription narcotics is on the rise as well.

The news comes from the 29th annual Monitoring the Future survey of nearly 50,000 students in 392 secondary schools across the country.

Key findings in this year's report include:

An overall drop in the use of illicit drugs. Earlier surveys showed drug use peaked among teens in 1996 and 1997. While use among eighth graders continued to decline, it held steady for 10th and 12th graders until 2002. But the decline in drug use among the eighth graders, which had fallen by a third in earlier years from the recent peak in 1996, showed no further decline this year.

A drop in use of ecstasy, a popular club drug. The proportion of American 10th- and 12th-grade students who reported using the drug ecstasy in the past year has fallen by more than half since use peaked in 2001. Use among eighth graders also dropped from 3.5 percent to 2.1 percent. Researchers attribute the fall to increasing awareness about the risks of the drug, since respondents reported little decline in availability of the drug.

"Ecstasy was the fly in the ointment over the last few years," said lead investigator Lloyd Johnston, a University of Michigan research professor and scientist. "So seeing that turn around and drop as much as it has is rewarding. That, in a way, has been a classic pattern that we have seen with a number of drugs. A new drug has only proponents (spreading information); it catches on and use spreads rapidly, and that happened with ecstasy. Then the epidemiological evidence comes out later and people learn there are consequences."


While heroin use is about half what it was in the mid-1990s, the decline in use has leveled off. Other drugs declining in use include LSD, with a particularly sharp drop in use in the past two years, and marijuana, dropping for a second year in use by 10th and 12th graders and dropping for a seventh year among eighth graders.


The use of narcotic drugs other than heroin, reported only for 12th graders, had risen "considerably" over a decade and finally leveled out at 9.3 percent this year. Such drugs include OxyContin, a time-release painkiller, and Vicodin. OxyContin and Vicodin use were added to the survey in 2002 and both drugs' usage increased.

"The fact all three grades are moving in parallel is of concern," Johnston said. "A drug like OxyContin is as addictive of heroin, but has a prevalence that is much higher."


Use of inhalants such as glues, aerosols, butane, paint thinner and nail polish remover, which had been on the decline for several years, has remained highest among eighth graders and increased significantly this year.


Use of alcohol changed little. While tobacco use dropped slightly, Johnston called the slight change a disturbing development that indicates improvements are decelerating.

The halting of declines among eighth graders' use of several substances is worrisome, researchers say.

"The eighth graders have been the harbingers of change observed later in the upper grades," Johnston said. That could mean a resurgence of drug use in upper grades in later years, he said.

"While most of the news from the survey this year is good news, it is worth attending to early warning signs of possible trouble ahead," Johnston said.

He attributed part of the surge in drug use in the early and mid-1990s, when heroin use was prevalent, to the first Gulf War. In the post 9-11 world with wars in Iraq and Afghanistan occupying much newspage and airtime, drug use and its consequences has fallen off the national radar screen, he said.

Monitoring the Future has been funded under a series of competing, investigator-initiated research grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.

Surveys of nationally representative samples of American high school seniors were begun in 1975, making the class of 2003 the 29th such class surveyed. Surveys of eighth and 10th graders were added to the design in 1991.


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