Experts worry that medical-pot laws promote teen use

Substance-abuse experts, alarmed by the rapid growth of Colorado’s medical-marijuana industry, are intensifying their efforts to study the industry’s impact on drug use. The experts say they especially worry that increasingly permissive attitudes surrounding marijuana use might be leading to higher teenage drug use and addiction rates.

That has been an often-voiced concern during debates over medical marijuana in Colorado. But substance-abuse-prevention workers say evidence from their clinics seems to bear it out. And they point to a recent study showing an increase in teenage marijuana use nationwide and a decrease in perceptions of its risk as further evidence of a need to examine the issue.

“The basic rule with any drug is if the drug becomes more available in the society, there will be more use of the drug,” said Thomas Crowley, a University of Colorado psychiatry professor and director of the university’s Division of Substance Dependence. “And as use expands, there will be more people who have problems with the drug.”

At his substance-abuse-treatment clinic for adolescents at Denver Health Medical Center, Christian Thurstone said he has seen hard evidence of the trend. Since the summer of 2009, roughly when Colorado’s medical-marijuana boom began, Thurstone said he has seen treatment referrals triple, from five to 15 per month. The large majority of those teens are referred — either by the criminal justice system, social services or other means – because of marijuana, he said.

Worried by the increase, Thurstone conducted a survey of 76 kids in his program. Of those, 60 said they knew someone with a medical-marijuana card, and 37 said they have obtained pot from a medical-marijuana patient, though none were patients themselves.

What’s more, Thurstone said teens who got marijuana from a patient were more likely to report smoking pot daily than those who didn’t. About 83 percent of the teens who scored pot from a patient reported daily use, compared with about 56 percent of those who didn’t get marijuana from a patient.

“It looks like it’s increasing access,” Thurstone said of the state’s medical-marijuana program.

“It looks like it’s making social norms more positive for marijuana. And it looks like it’s increasing frequency of use.” Thurstone said he intends to apply for federal grant funding to more fully examine the subject.


Source: The Denver Post www.denverpost.com 01/01/2011

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