Pubdate: Fri, 19 Mar 2010 Source: Times, The (UK) Copyright: 2010 Times Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454 Author: Antonia Senior LIKE ALL DRUGS, MIAOW-MIAOW SHOULD BE LEGAL Attempting to Scare Teenagers About the Dangers of Drugs Is Pointless: Their Brains Are Wired Up to Take Risks It's all depressingly familiar. Two teenage lives cruelly taken by drugs. A public keening and a kneejerk political reaction. A new ban. And then? A new drug will emerge, like a snarling Hydra's head, and new teenagers will be ensnared and some will die. It is desperately sad that Louis Wainwright, 18, and Nicholas Smith, 19, fell victim to the current craze for mephedrone, or miaow-miaow. It is a legal drug and the internet is awash with sites offering quick and easy ways to buy it. The dealers accept all major credit cards, and Royal Mail delivers the stash. There's no hanging around street corners with miaow-miaow. As the drug is illegal for human consumption, the websites market it as plant food, and use tortuous floral metaphors to advertise its efficacy: "A big boost to any tired-looking flowers!" In the current regime of prohibition, silence and lies, the obvious response to these tragic deaths is to ban miaow-miaow. It is an absurdity to have one legal, dangerous drug, when all others are prohibited. Except alcohol. Oh, and tobacco. And methadone, of course, but that's different, apparently, because the State's the dealer. So ban mephedrone, and then the kids who want to get high will be forced back to their usual haunts, of street corners and alleyways. Their dealers will be delighted to welcome them back into the fold and be given a chance to practice what a legitimate business would call "cross-selling". How about some crack with your miaow-miaow, little girl? Drugs policy must start from the premise that teenagers like taking drugs, because drugs make them feel good. No child thinks, I'd love to be a crack-addled hooker when I grow up. Something happens between childhood and adulthood that makes taking drugs recreationally an attractive option, despite all the weighty downsides, dangers of addiction and hideous side-effects. Since the invention of functional MRI scanning in the early Nineties, it has become evident that our brains undergo extraordinary functional and structural changes during adolescence and into our early twenties. Different parts of the brain develop at different speeds. The limbic area that controls our desire for rewards develops earlier than the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in decision-making. But the dissonance between the two means that one part of the brain is shouting, "Yeah, that drug will give me a buzz," while the other is going, "Um, um . . . " In an adult the prefrontal cortex would kick in to shout: "No! You'll get arrested/ die/look like a prat. How about a nice walk in the park and a scone instead?" The late development of the prefrontal cortex explains much about adolescents' inability to make good decisions. Professor Laurence Steinberg, of Temple University in the US, is one of the leaders in this area of research. He describes teenagers as having " a well-developed accelerator but only a partly developed brake". n a study of attitudes to risk about to be published by Stephanie Burnett, of University College London, children, adolescents and adults were set a task in which they played a video game based on making safe or risky choices. The teenagers took more risks than the others. The three groups' emotional responses were measured; adolescents were particularly thrilled and excited when they had lucky escapes. Dr Burnett says: "The reason that teenagers take risks is not a problem with weighing up the consequences. It was more because they enjoyed taking those risks." An earlier study by Professor Steinberg found that teenagers playing a driving game took greater chances when their friends were watching. Peer pressure has an inflammatory effect on risk-taking. The ability to think about the long-term future is another late-developing function, says Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, of UCL's Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience. Teenagers also have a different tolerance for boredom. Studies on rats have also shown that teenage rodents get more of the pleasure out of alcohol, and less of the pain. Neuroscientist believe this may apply to us -- non-scientific proof may be found by quizzing an 18-year-old and a 50-year-old after a heavy night on the razz. That teenager festering in a filthy bedroom is a bored, short-termist risk-taker, with poor decision-making skills and a propensity to be heavily influenced by other similarly afflicted peers. Add in a cocktail of hormones that encourages novelty seeking and social competitiveness, and the wonder is that any of them don't take drugs, not that many do. The flipside is that the effect of drugs on teenage, developing brains may be damaging. The complex process of restructuring the brain during these crucial years does not need an influx of chemicals designed to disrupt its normal functioning in pursuit of a buzz. There is a horrible irony here; the impulses that lead teenagers towards drugs are those that mean they should leave them alone until adulthood. A teenage brain may be a work in progress, but it is not stupid. Lecturing does not work, and neither does the current insistence that all drugs offer is the evil side-effects. A public drugs policy that fails to address the irrepressible urge to get high is always doomed to failure. We have obviously, and visibly, failed to win the war on drugs. We must admit that demand is not eradicable and that supply is uninterruptible. We must wrest the drugs trade out of the hands of criminals, legalise it and tax it. All drugs should be legally available to anyone over the age of 21. You cannot legalise without an age limit, but this will create a black market under that limit. The best we can hope for is an under-age black market that replicates the alcohol one -- where the dealers are big siblings and overindulgent parents. At least if the broad market was legal, we could be sure that whatever drugs our teenagers seek out are pure. It would be easier to provide honest guidance on what drugs mix badly -- and what to do when experiments go wrong. It may sound like a dangerous strategy, but it cannot possibly be any worse than the current system, in which the only winners are the criminal barons. Who are about to get even fatter on the take from illegal miaow-miaow. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake