TEXT B
INBOX HEROES NO HARM DONE?
A majority of teens see marijuana as risk-free
Although teen smoking rates are at a record low, more of them are smoking pot and fewer than ever believe it is bad for them. Data released last December show that only 44.1% of 12th graders believe regular marijuana use is harmful. That may explain why more than one third of high school seniors tried pot ∈2012, and one ∈15 smoked it daily.
The growing acceptance of medical marijuana may be behind teens’ changing attitudes. Since 1996, 18 states, plus the District of Columbia, have made it legal for adults to obtain pot with a doctor’s prescription.
But pot poses a higher risk for teens than for adults. In August investigators at Duke University and other institutions published the results of a 25-year study suggesting that heavy use among adolescents can do permanent cognitive damage. Subjects who were diagnosed with marijuana dependence as teens and adults suffered IQ declines of up to eight points between the ages of 13 and 38, even after the researchers controlled for other drug dependence, schizophrenia and education. (Abstainers’ IQs rose slightly). Moreover, the IQs of teen users did not recover even if they quit ∈ adulthood.
How much marijuana is too much? It is hard to find out. There is no accurate way to measure consumption because marijuana joints are rarely identical and potency varies. What is clear is that adolescent brains are particularly vulnerable to marijuana’s effects, so teens would be smart to abstain – and may stay smarter for it, too.
Scientific American, March 2013
The growing acceptance of medical marijuana may be behind teens’ changing attitudes. Since 1996, 18 states, plus the District of Columbia, have made it legal for adults to obtain pot with a doctor’s prescription.
But pot poses a higher risk for teens than for adults. In August investigators at Duke University and other institutions published the results of a 25-year study suggesting that heavy use among adolescents can do permanent cognitive damage. Subjects who were diagnosed with marijuana dependence as teens and adults suffered IQ declines of up to eight points between the ages of 13 and 38, even after the researchers controlled for other drug dependence, schizophrenia and education. (Abstainers’ IQs rose slightly). Moreover, the IQs of teen users did not recover even if they quit ∈ adulthood.
How much marijuana is too much? It is hard to find out. There is no accurate way to measure consumption because marijuana joints are rarely identical and potency varies. What is clear is that adolescent brains are particularly vulnerable to marijuana’s effects, so teens would be smart to abstain – and may stay smarter for it, too.
Scientific American, March 2013
How much marijuana is too much? It is hard to find out. There is no accurate way to measure consumption because marijuana joints are rarely identical and potency varies. What is clear is that adolescent brains are particularly vulnerable to marijuana’s effects, so teens would be smart to abstain – and may stay smarter for it, too.
Scientific American, March 2013
TEXT B informs us that the percentage of high school seniors who tried pot ∈2012 is