Issue 267 | Tuesday 13 March 2012 | Fortnightly | Free
THE DRUGS ISSUE UEA’s Independent Student Newspaper
DERBY ELECTION DAY RESULTS Pull out inside Meet your new officers
Students: drinking to fit in • Over 90% of students believe cannabis should be legalised • Almost half of UEA students have felt pressured to drink to fit in James Dixon News editor Concrete’s annual student drugs survey has dredged up some interesting results, that reflect UEA students’ attitudes towards legal and illegal drugs. 69.9% of students surveyed stated that they had taken illegal drugs of some kind and 85.6% of students had no regrets for having done so. The cannabis question 71.5% of students who completed the survey stated that they had taken cannabis at some point in their lives. In response to the question concerning the legalisation of drugs, a massive 95.1% of students suggested that cannabis be legalised. This means that a large 23.6% of students believe that cannabis should be legalised despite having never sampled the drug. Cannabis is currently a class B drug, having been declassified in 2004 from B to C, only to witness a reclassification in 2009 back to a class B drug. The legalisation would echo countries such as Portugal where personal possession of drugs was decriminalised in 2001. If a drug user is caught in Portugal then they are referred to a panel that includes a social worker, a psychiatrist, and an attorney. Also, in Uruguay possession limits were never classified, therefore decriminalising personal drug use. A significant 70.5% of students stated that they knew someone that dealt drugs. This suggests that the attainment of illegal
drugs in Norwich is a relatively simplistic matter due to the large proportion of connections students believe they have. 10.2% of students claimed to take illegal drugs at least once a week, producing the idea that their access to illegal drugs is unbarred. Intense peer pressure Alcohol consumption was also surveyed and, perhaps unsurprisingly, found that 89.2% of students enjoy drinking with 71.3% of respondents believing that alcohol had enhanced their experience at UEA. 46.7% of students thought that UEA either “probably or definitely” has a drinking culture that encourages students to drink too much. 39.3% of students felt pressured to drink alcohol to fit in at UEA. Despite such an apparent culture of excess, 7.3% of students surveyed felt that they had a dependency upon alcohol whilst 88.2% felt their drinking was under control. Drinkaware recommends that men do not exceed 21 units a week, and states that women should stay under 14 units. These limits are not supposed to be consumed in one day. If a man were to drink eight pints of 5% lager over a week, he would exceed his recommended weekly allowance. The consumption of alcohol is ingrained in society and it is considered a socially acceptable drug in comparison to its illegal counterparts. From 2008/9, the NHS had to deal with 1,057,000 alcohol related admissions to hospital. Drugs form an unavoidable facet of society that will continue to save lives, intoxicate and harm.
THE CONCRETE DRUGs SURVEY
D A E R P S E R T N E C E SE
Laura Smith