Pubdate: Wed, 29 Dec 2010 Source: Ledger, The (Lakeland, FL) Copyright: 2010 The Ledger Contact: http://www.theledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/795 SMOKING'S HARM: TAMP OUT TEEN MARIJUANA USE Two recent reports on smoking describe two very different trends. One report is national, the other from California. When it comes to tobacco, a California Health and Human Services Agency survey released Dec. 20 found that more and more California residents are kicking the habit. The rate of decline is more than double the national average, and California's incidence of lung cancer has fallen three times as fast as the national average. Let us hope that California's reputation as a harbinger holds true in this case. When it comes to teenagers, however, a survey funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse found that a decline in cigarette smoking has been eclipsed by an increase in marijuana smoking. The national survey was released Dec. 14. Among high school seniors, 21.4 percent reported smoking marijuana, compared to 19.2 percent who said they smoke cigarettes. About one in 16 said they smoke pot daily. The study also found growing use of marijuana use by younger teens and even tweens. Sixteen percent of eighth-graders said they had smoked pot in the past year, about 10 percent more than in last year's survey. While the results are alarming, perhaps they're not so surprising. Smoking Kills The message about tobacco is unambiguous: It can kill you. Stark new warning labels on cigarette packages reinforce that message. Messages about marijuana are murkier. In November, California voters rejected a measure to legalize marijuana for recreational use. But Dr. Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said medical marijuana is a factor in rising use among teens, and she's probably right. No, kids aren't smoking pot to combat text anxiety. But California teens are certainly aware that the flimsiest claim is enough to qualify under Proposition 215, the state's overly permissive medical marijuana law. In any case, smoking marijuana is medically harmful in the same ways as tobacco smoking. So it should be avoided unless the medical value exceeds the medical risk, where legal for that purpose. Looking for goals in the new year? If you smoke, stop. If you believe marijuana has medical value -- and we do -- support efforts to define those values and establish guidelines for doctors to follow in recommending marijuana as they would any other medicine, while assuring that the marijuana is strictly controlled for legitimate medical use. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D