Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jun 2010 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Suzanne Fournier, The Province VIEW EARLY POT USE AS HEALTH, NOT LEGAL, ISSUE Education Better Than Punishing Young Kids Teens should be discouraged from smoking marijuana as part of good public-health policy, not because they'll be punished by police, according to health researchers. Most casual users of cannabis suffer few ill-effects but it is those users who start young and smoke a lot of pot over a long period of time who can suffer significant harm, warns Simon Fraser University's " Benedikt Fischer. New research led by the health sciences professor and published in the International " Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research urges putting a stop to Canada's one-size-fits all approach to cannabis " use. "The way we go about cannabis policy is with a very big and heavy hammer and we see only one nail, which is the enforcement and punishment approach, so we hammer away at that," Fischer said Thursday. "We have primarily a law that says all cannabis use is bad and we should punish " all people who engage in that behaviour, " rather than using a tightly controlled " regulatory approach as we do with alcohol." Fischer recommends that "universal cannabis-use prohibition" should be replaced with "effective interventions" aimed at a few early and high-frequency users who face the most risks to their mental and physical health. More effective than threats of punishment or police action would be "realistic, appropriate and health-focused educational initiatives aimed at school-aged children," said Fischer. "If you're a parent, try to convince your children ideally on the basis of compliance, rather than punishment. "It's best that children not get into cannabis use in their mid-teens," Fischer says, noting that kids who start smoking marijuana at 15 or younger tend to develop, or exacerbate, mental and physical health problems. Young teens may smoke pot to "self-medicate" or cover up issues such as depression, anxiety or learning difficulties, but their use of pot then makes it difficult to diagnose underlying issues and get help to kids who need it. Fischer's study, which notes that cannabis is the most commonly used "illicit drug" in the Canadian population, looked at 1,303 current cannabis users. Researchers identified the highest-risk group to experience health problems as only those users who began smoking pot early and kept up almost daily use. Notes Fischer: "This group was disproportionately linked to key harms, including using other illicit drugs, driving while intoxicated, substance-abuse problems and medical issues." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D