Pubdate: Tue, 23 Oct 2012 Source: Ledger-Enquirer (Columbus, GA) Copyright: 2012 Ledger-Enquirer Contact: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/237 Author: Jim Mustian Red Ribbon Week WITH GREATER POTENCY, MARIJUANA USE RISES AMONG TEENS Fake Weed' Poses New Challenges for Law Enforcement With its widespread availability, marijuana is among the first drugs teenagers encounter, and more youngsters are lighting up these days than in years past. It's a trend that concerns experts and counselors who say teens grossly underestimate the risks of a psychoactive drug more potent than your father's marijuana. "Marijuana is back," said Sgt. Donald M. Bush, who coordinates the Columbus Police Department's Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. "You may have an older person say, 'When I was young, I smoked marijuana and it didn't do anything to me.' But now you've got a much higher percentage of THC, and it's a whole different game." As fewer teens perceive marijuana to be harmful, use of the drug rose among high school students in 2011 for the fourth straight year, according to Monitoring the Future, a nationally representative study of teen drug use. The annual survey, sponsored by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, found daily marijuana use reached a 30-year peak among 12th graders, with 1 in 15 seniors today smoking on a daily or near daily basis. The drug remains among the easiest to obtain, teens say, with 82 percent of 12th graders saying marijuana was fairly or very easy to find. "It's so much easier to get now," said Jeniah Johnson, a 17-year-old senior at Hardaway High School in Columbus who abstains from drugs. "You don't have to look hard to figure out who's got it." Experts who analyze marijuana sold on the street say it contains a more potent concentration of the psychoactive ingredient Tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, than in previous generations. "I can tell you categorically that there has been a tremendous increase in the potency over time," said Dr. Mahmoud A. ElSohly, a research professor at the University of Mississippi's National Center for Natural Products Research. ElSohly, who has analyzed thousands of confiscated samples of the drug, said marijuana is at least 10 times more potent today than it was in the 1970s. Tolerance to the drug, he said, has driven cultivators to up the ante through genetic selection and advanced growing practices. "The problem comes with adolescents and young people that are really naive," he added. "They haven't been using this material and they have not -- for lack of a better term -- graduated to the use of this high potency stuff. When they use this before they realize the material is really high potency, they have already consumed more than enough to cause them some trauma." The push for legalization and the growing use of medical marijuana may have desensitized teens to the toxic effects of cannabis. Recent studies, however, suggest adolescents who start younger and smoke often subject themselves to neurological damage in addition to other detrimental effects. "What a lot of the teenagers don't understand is if you get a marijuana arrest, that's a drug arrest," said Capt. Gil Slouchick of the Columbus Police Department's Special Operations Unit. "When you have a drug arrest on your record, you go to get a job and what you did when you were 18, 19 years old could come back to haunt you." Synthetic marijuana Posing a new challenge for law enforcement is the rise of synthetic marijuana, typically a mix of spices and herbs sprayed with a synthetic compound chemically similar to THC. Last year, 11.4 percent of high school seniors said they'd used synthetic marijuana in the prior 12 months. Marketed as incense or "fake weed," the drug has been sold in convenience stores, head shops and online. Compounds commonly found in the designer drugs like Spice and K2 have been banned, and federal and state authorities have cracked down on synthetic marijuana in recent months. A raid in Columbus in June netted 100 packages of the drug from Lucky Food Mart on 13th Street, and two men were charged this month after the Spice was determined at a crime lab to violate the Georgia Controlled Substance Act. Teens are attracted to the drug because it produces a stronger high and won't register in routine lab tests. But its health implications aren't completely understood, and doctors have become increasingly concerned about its adverse effects, which can include convulsions, paranoia and abnormally high blood pressure. "When the real thing is out there, you pretty much know what you've got," Slouchick said. "People smoking the synthetic don't know what they're smoking. This is really kind of an uphill battle for us." Bush, the D.A.R.E. instructor, said he tries to keep his students focused on a positive goal so they aren't tempted to turn down the perilous path of substance abuse. "Kids, unless they are just mummified, are still at the point where they have dreams, goals and aspirations," Bush said. "In all these years, I've never had a child say really I want to stay in fifth grade or I have no ambition in life. They always have something, so you have to grow from that point on." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom