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1998 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse |
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° Current smokers were more likely than non-smokers to be heavy drinkers and illicit drug users. Among current smokers, the rate of heavy alcohol use (five or more drinks on the same occasion on five or more days in the past month) was 14.0 percent, the rate of marijuana/hashish use was 13.6 percent, and the rate of current illicit drug use was 16.1 percent. Among nonsmokers, only 2.9 percent were heavy drinkers, 1.8 percent were marijuana/hashish users, and 2.5 percent were illicit drug users.
° An estimated 3.1 percent of the population were current users of smokeless tobacco in 1998. The rate has remained steady since 1991.
° An estimated 6.9 percent of the population were current users of cigars in 1998. This represents a statistically significant increase from 1997, when the rate was 5.9 percent.
° Youths age 12-17 who currently smoked
cigarettes were 11.4 times as likely to use illicit drugs and 16 times
as likely to drink heavily as nonsmoking youths (Figure 12).
° The current smoking rate among young
adults age 18-25 continues to follow an upward path from 34.6 percent in
1994 to 35.3 percent in 1995, 38.3 percent in 1996, 40.6 percent in 1997,
and 41.6 percent in 1998. The 1998 rate is significantly higher than the
1994, 1995 and 1996 rates.
° An estimated 5.6 percent of youths age 12-17, or 1.3 million, were current cigar users in 1998. This rate compares to 5.0 percent in 1997; the difference is not statistically significant.
° The rate of current smokeless tobacco use was significantly higher for men than for women in 1998 (5.9 percent vs. 0.5 percent). About 91 percent of smokeless tobacco users were men. Similarly, males were more likely than females to use cigars (11.9 percent vs. 2.3 percent).

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