The Assistant Secretary for Health and Surgeon General chaired the third review this
decade on Healthy People 2000 objectives for substance abuse. As the lead agency for this
priority area, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration led a
discussion that focused on the abuse of alcohol and illegal drugs by young people and on
strategies for reducing these practices. Attention was given to the following objectives
during the course of the review:
4.1 The rate of alcohol-related motor vehicle crash deaths for the total
population declined from the 1987 baseline of 9.8 per 100,000 to 6.5 in 1997. The Healthy
People 2000 (HP2000) target is 5.5. The change from baseline is even greater for people
aged 15-24 years, whose rate of alcohol-related crash deaths declined from 21.5 per
100,000 in 1987 to 12.9 in 1996. HP2000 target is 12.5. (See chart.)
4.3 Preliminary data indicate that the rate of drug-related deaths for the total
population increased from the 1987 baseline of 3.8 per 100,000 to 4.7 in 1996. Since 1990,
the drug-related death rate has increased 21 percent for blacks and 40 percent for
Hispanics. HP2000 target is 3 deaths per 100.000 for all groups.
4.4 The rate of drug-related hospital emergency department visits increased from
176 per 100,000 in 1991, the baseline year, to 207 in 1996. This may be due to increased
utilization. The HP2000 target is 140.6 visits per 100,000, or a 20 percent reduction.
4.5 The average age of first use of marijuana increased from 13.4 years in 1988
to 14.4 in 1996, meeting the HP2000 target of 14.4. In 1996, the average age of first use
of alcohol among this group was 13.1 years, unchanged from the 1988 baseline. HP2000
target is 14.1 years. The verage age of first use of cigarettes by adolescents aged 12-17
increased from 11.6 years in 1988 to 12.4 in 1996, approaching the HP2000 target of 12.6.
However, it should be noted that an increased number of older adolescents use cigarettes,
according to the CDC Youth Risk Behavior Survey.
4.6 The proportion of young people aged 12-17 years who used alcohol in the
previous month declined from 33 percent in 1988 to 19 percent in 1996. HP2000 target is
12.6 percent. The proportion of those aged 18-20 using alcohol in the previous month also
declined, from 55 percent in 1988 to 50 percent in 1996, well short of the HP2000 target
of 29 percent. After a decrease between 1988 and 1992, marijuana use by adolescents aged
12-17 and young adults aged 18-25 began increasing in 1993, and the 1996 rates of usage
are almost twice the target levels. However, the rates of current cocaine use by both
groups in 1996 were half the rates of usage in 1988, and the HP2000 targets for reductions
in cocaine use have been met. Cigarette smoking among 12-17 year-olds declined from 23
percent in 1988 to 18 percent in 1996. HP2000 target is 6 percent.
4.7 In each of the years from 1989 to 1997, about a third of high school seniors
reported a recent occasion of heavy drinking (5 or more drinks). HP2000 target is 28
percent. Among college students, the proportion of occasional heavy drinkers varied little
from 1989 to 1997, remaining at about 40 percent. HP2000 target is 32 percent.
4.9 From the late 1980s to the early 1990s, an increasing proportion of high
school seniors perceived parent and peer disapproval of heavy drinking, occasional
marijuana use, experimentation with cocaine, and smoking. In more recent years, however,
this proportion has decreased.
4.14 The proportion of worksites with 50 or more employees that adopted alcohol
and/or drug policies rose to over 90 percent in 1995.
4.15 In 1997, 40 states had driver’s license suspension/revocation laws for
intoxicated drivers, as compared with 29 states in 1990. HP 2000 target is 50 states and
the District of Columbia.
4.16 and 4.17 In 1996, 46 states had enacted statutes beyond those existing in
1989 to reduce minors’ access to beverage alcohol. Thirteen states had enacted
statutes to restrict promotion of beverage alcohol to young audiences. HP2000 targets are
50 states and 20 states, respectively.
4.18 The number of states with statutory blood alcohol content (BAC) levels of
0.08 percent for adults aged 21 and over increased from 7 in 1993 to 15 in 1997. The
number of states with BAC levels of 0.02 percent or less for people under 21 (zero
tolerance) increased from 9 in 1993 to 48 (and the District of Columbia) in 1998. HP2000
target for each is 50 states.
4.19 In baseline year 1992, the proportion of primary care providers who
screened patients for alcohol or other drug use problems ranged from 23 percent of family
physicians to 63 percent of internists. HP2000 target is 75 percent.

