Inhalant abuse is a public health problem that disproportionately affects young people. This page provides graphic representation of recent trends in use, attitudes about inhalants among U.S. schoolchildren, and current levels of inhalant use in the United States, distributed by gender, ethnicity, and age. The source of the data is NIDA's annual Monitoring the Future survey of adolescents in grades 8, 10, and 12.
Current trends are positive in two respects. Increasingly, young people surveyed see "great risk" in trying inhalants. At the same time, the percentage reporting inhalant abuse is declining.
Although the percentages of U.S. male and female students reporting past-year use of inhalants are virtually identical among 8th- to 12th-graders, use by males is more likely among older youths. Inhalant use is reported by a greater percentage of whites and Hispanics than by Blacks.