Listen Live!
join BAW
forgot password
LIFE
WORK
PLAY


blAck americaweb.com

Teen Use of Pot Can Lead to Mental Illness

Date: Monday, May 12, 2008
By: Jennifer C. Kerr, Associated Press

WASHINGTON - (AP) Depression, teens and marijuana are a dangerous mix that can lead to dependency, mental illness or suicidal thoughts, according to a White House report being released Friday.

A teen who has been depressed at some point in the past year is more than twice as likely to have used marijuana as teens who have not reported being depressed - 25 percent compared with 12 percent, said the report by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.






"Marijuana is a more consequential substance of abuse than our culture has treated it in the last 20 years," said John Walters, director of the office. "This is not just youthful experimentation that they'll get over as we used to think in the past."

Smoking marijuana can lead to more serious problems, Walters said in an interview.

For example, using marijuana increases the risk of developing mental disorders by 40 percent, the report said. And teens who smoke pot at least once a month over a yearlong period are three times more likely to have suicidal thoughts than nonusers, it said.

The report also cited research that showed that teens who smoke marijuana when feeling depressed were more than twice as likely as their peers to abuse or become addicted to pot - 8 percent compared with 3 percent.

Experts who have worked with children say there's nothing harmless about marijuana.

"I've seen many, many kids' lives negatively impacted and taken off track because of marijuana," said Elizabeth Stanley-Salazar, director of adolescent services for Phoenix House treatment centers in California. "It's somewhat Russian roulette. There are so many factors, emotional, psychological, biological. You can't predict the experimentation and how it will impact a kid."

Bruce Mirken, communications director for the Marijuana Policy Project, an organization that advocates the decriminalization of marijuana, called the study "an absolutely dishonest report, deliberately confusing correlation with causation."

"This very week the British government's official scientific advisers on illegal drugs issued a report saying they are 'unconvinced that there is a causal relationship between the use of cannabis and any affective disorder,' such as depression, he said.

The drug control policy office analyzed about a dozen studies looking at marijuana use, including research by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

Overall, marijuana use among teens has decreased 25 percent since 2001, down to about 2.3 million kids who used pot at least once a month, the drug control office said.

While the drop is encouraging, Walters appealed to parents to recognize signs of possible drug use and depression.

"It's not something you look the other way about when your teen starts appearing careless about their grooming, withdrawing from the family, losing interest in daily activities," Walters said. "Find out what's wrong."




Discuss

cxd says:

All that crap is BAD and doesn't need to be on Earth...

On a Humorous note... Cheech read more

CAmira says:

Alcoholism can lead to an earlier onset of Alzheimer's Disease.

predorprey says:

Any report coming out of the Bush Administration needs to be carefully reviewed. Didn't Bush admit to smoking weed? read more

CAmira says:

I went to college with a girl who had smoked weed fairly regularly since she was 15. At 20 years read more

BluMinerva says:

OK. This is the neverending discussion. I know that anyone who has their mind made up that marijuana is a read more





More Headlines

HIV Vaccine Search Frustrates Officials

Scientists will have to take "enormous intellectual leaps" to develop an AIDS vaccine in the coming years, say researchers clearly frustrated by the failure of a once-promising shot.

Quest: Repairing More Hearts With Implanted Pumps

When it comes to hearts, Taneal Wilson won the lottery. A small pump implanted to keep the 31-year-old alive long enough for a heart transplant somehow helped Wilson's ravaged heart completely recover ...

Trainer Uses Boxing, Other Unusual Moves to Help Parkinson's Patients

Boxing, along with other exercises like jogging, crunches and medicine-ball tosses, helps fight those symptoms and keep muscles strong, Marks said. Even though his Parkinson's clients hit punching bags and not each other, ...

CDC: Mississippi Still Nation's Fattest State

Mississippi has had the highest obesity rate every year since 2004. But Alabama, Tennessee, West Virginia and Louisiana have also clustered near the top of the list, officials claim.

Physical Fitness May Slow Alzheimer Brain Atrophy

Getting a lot of exercise may help slow brain shrinkage in people with early Alzheimer's disease, a preliminary study suggests. Analysis found that participants who were more physically fit had less brain shrinkage than ...



Copyright © 2001-2005 BlackAmericaWeb.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
About Us | Advertise | Help | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Unsubscribe