38 Comments

  1. I thought at least steroids would have gone up more; that’s interesting.

    Is it just because they’re at home on their phones? They’re not drinking either.

  2. Interesting to see how those utterly terrifying adverts in the 90s really stopped everyone taking heroine. That and watching trainspotting.

    They should probably do something similar for ketamine.

  3. On the coke one you can see exactly when Mcat got banned lol same with e but slightly less pronounced

  4. Radioactivocalypse on

    Idk what the reasons are, but one good thing about teens sitting at home occupied by video games, is they’re not just bored on the streets getting offered drugs, and accepting them because they’re bored.

    And also education probably helps. I think a lot more teens and young adults are more aware of the risks of drug taking

  5. GarysCrispLettuce on

    Shit, it seems we really did a lot of drugs in the 90’s. That LSD graph looks about right, lol. The summer of 1995 was very trippy.

  6. Interesting to not see a graph labelled as spice. It’s very popular in the prison community, even with the younger inmates.

  7. Data is beautiful, but self reported survey data is not to be taken at face value. The only real “trend” you can take from this is which drugs are “socially acceptable” enough for an individual to report.

    There have been studies that use waste water as an indicator for illicit drug use in a localized population, but this data is specifically pulled from self report. Anyone want to make a claim about how honest 16-24 year old people are about their drug use?

  8. I immediately find any study that includes Ecstasy and Amphetamines but not MDMA suspect unless they clearly define what they mean by Ecstasy

  9. doctor_munchies on

    Considering how depressed most people are these days I’d say these graphs are accurate