Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jun 2003 Source: Riverfront Times (MO) Section: Unreal Copyright: 2003 New Times, Inc. Contact: http://www.rftstl.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/367 Cited: National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign http://www.mediacampaign.org/ REEFER BADNESS There's a Lot of Misinformation Out There: Here's More Last Wednesday White House anti-drug crusaders set up camp at KETC-TV (Channel 9)'s downtown St. Louis offices as part of a cross-country tour to help reduce teen drug use 25 percent by 2007. The way the feds see it, the media are part of the drug problem. According to Robert W. Denniston, deputy director of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, less than 10 percent of news stories about marijuana mention negative consequences. "So we know there's a lot of misinformation out there," Denniston says. Eager to do our part - and to partake of the free box lunch - Unreal joined two fellow journalists, a dozen drug-treatment providers and the anti-drug panel, which consisted of Denniston, two experts and a reformed teen toker. "We have a lot of new scientific information," Denniston let it be known. In 2001, emergency rooms tallied 2,311 "marijuana drug episodes" in St. Louis alone. Nine local people died -- died -- that year after smoking pot. These statistics were distributed along with other literature in a shiny folder festooned with a photo of a spanking-new pipe stuffed with schwag. Unreal discerned that the pictured pot was laced with seeds, and, more distressingly, that the statistics were unadorned with context. What was the precise nature, we wondered, of the "drug episodes" and the deaths? Alas, there was no time for musing; it was on to the "new scientific information." To wit: Researchers have found that marijuana targets neurological receptors that affect memory, emotional stability and cognitive skills, said Dr. Michael Spigarelli, an assistant professor of pediatrics and internal medicine at the University of Cincinnati. Pot, Spigarelli added, is addictive, it's probably a gateway drug, and kids who use it are more prone toward violence than kids who don't. Teen dope smokers don't exercise as much as they should and can end up as couch potatoes or worse. "Forgetting the condom, getting in a car accident, can lead to devastating consequences for getting high for a little while," said the doctor. Disaster aside, pot's bad: "You escape for the fifteen minutes or two hours that you are high, but in life you need to pay that time back." Seventeen-year-old Caroline, who sat behind a placard that read simply "Teen," earned a round of applause when she said she's been clean for ten months. When she asserted she'd never used anything stronger than pot, panelist Linda Cottler, a Washington University epidemiologist, said that was probably because no other drugs were available. One of the most disturbing trends she has seen, says Cottler, are surveys that show 30 percent of high-school seniors don't see anything wrong with occasional marijuana use. Adults with attitudes born in the 1960s aren't much better, she says: "Parents just don't get it." Jeez, the crisis is much bigger than we imagined. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake