Fewer teens are driving drunk, national survey says

A government survey shows fewer teens and young adults say they drive drunk.

Last year, nearly 7 percent said they'd recently driven while under the influence of alcohol. That figure has been steadily going down. It was 16 percent a dozen years earlier.

The numbers are for people ages 16 to 20 who participated in a large government survey focused on alcohol, tobacco and use.

Drunken driving by people in their early 20s is more common but also is falling.

The survey also asked about driving under the influence of marijuana. Three percent of teens and said they'd done that recently. That statistic has held about steady since 2002.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the report Thursday.

More information: CDC report: www.cdc.gov/mmwr

© 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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