Pubdate: Tue, 16 Nov 2010 Source: Kenora Daily Miner And News (CN ON) Website: http://mapinc.org/url/da3pDkcA Copyright: 2010 Kenora Daily Miner and News Contact: http://www.kenoradailyminerandnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/855 Author: Garett Williams Drug Awareness Week RISKS FAR GREATER NOW This isn't your dad's weed. Studies show the levels of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive component in marijuana, is more than nine times higher in drugs on the street today than the era of peace and love. "In the 1960s the average potency of a joint of marijuana was probably less than one per cent," Dr. Sherry Reed-Walkiewicz said. "Now, the average potency is somewhere in the order of nine to 10 per cent and so that's basically nine-times the potency, which is nine times the psychogenic effect, which is toxic to the brain and particularly so in young people." Following an "extensive literature review," Reed-Walkiewicz is hosting an awareness presentation titled Marijuana Madness... From Hippie Cool to Mentally Cruel at the Lakewood School cafeteria tonight from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. aimed at showing parents the potential long-term affects the drug can have on the developing brain. "The teenage brain is hard-wiring, it's pruning and it's rewiring and if you throw stuff into this rewiring, hard-wiring process that messes it up, then you're going to have permanent effects," she said. "Where as a 30-40-year-old smokes a potent joint, they're neurons aren't developing, therefore they're more resistant to the permanently damaging effects that the THC will do to them." Reed-Walkiewicz's hour-long presentation draws on data from studies released within the last year, including one identifying particular gene combinations that, if paired with marijuana and the effects of THC, increases the users chance of developing schizophrenia to 15 per cent higher than the general population. While studies have looked into the drug's positive effects, for patients suffering from multiple sclerosis or Alzheimer's, for example, Reed-Walkiewicz noted they are controlled tests on fully developed adults, older than 25. "It's good in specific cases for specific reasons," she said. "Unfortunately, the stuff that's on the street, the stuff that people are smoking, isn't chemical purified, laboratory tested cannabinoids that have the therapeutic benefits. They're smoking the stuff that has randomly high amounts of THC that has all the negative effects in it." The presentation is in partnership with the OPP and falls during Drug Awareness Week, which generally focuses on offering students insight into the dangers if drugs. Reed-Walkiewicz conceded it would be unrealistic to expect youth not to indulge but said she wants to arm parents with the information and general awareness needed to inspire early intervention. "If you're a parent, are you going to just look the other way and say 'oh, my kid smokes dope, no big deal, I did when I was their age,'" she asked. "It's not the same stuff as Woodstock. The risks are far greater and far more certain now than then and it's a bit more of a Russian roulette game now." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt