HAMILTON, Bermuda, CMC – The Department of National Drug Control (DNDC) says alcohol and tobacco use among young people appears to be declining, but that cannabis use is more common among school pupils than smoking regular cigarettes.
The survey was conducted by the DNDC and the Ministry of Education last October and involved 2,701 children between the ages of 10 and 18.
The results, released on Monday, showed that 48.4 per cent of respondents reported using at least one drug in their lifetime, down from 52.8 per cent in 2019, when the last survey was carried out.
The survey also showed that 42 per cent of students had sampled alcohol, 12.6 per cent had taken cannabis and 3.5 per cent had smoked cigarettes. In 2019, those figures were 45.2 per cent, 18.3 per cent and 5.2 per cent, respectively.
Almost 15 per cent of S4 students said that they take cannabis at present, compared with less than two per cent who said they smoke cigarettes. Consumption of cannabis was also higher among girls than boys.
The results suggested that health factors may be a reason for cannabis being more popular than tobacco.
The survey found more than a quarter of S4 students said that they consume alcohol, but the survey revealed that 3.7 per cent of ten-year-olds also drink.
Another statistic revealed that more than a fifth of respondents — 22.1 per cent — said they had been a passenger in a car driven by someone who had drunk alcohol, while 8.2 per cent said they had been a passenger on a bike driven by someone who had been drinking.
According to the findings, alcohol and marijuana were “easily accessible” with the study indicating that roughly one in ten – 10.4 per cent – students was offered to buy or use marijuana in the past 30 days of the survey and 13.7 per cent were offered to buy or use alcohol.
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