Pubdate: Mon, 16 Sep 2013 Source: Arizona Republic (Phoenix, AZ) Copyright: 2013 The Arizona Republic Contact: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/sendaletter.html Website: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/24 Author: Sheila Polk Note: Sheila Polk is the Yavapai County attorney and co-chairwoman of MATForce, the Yavapai County Substance Abuse Coalition. LET'S MAKE POT'S DANGERS CLEAR Odds are you know someone with an addiction: 2.3 million people over the age of 12 sought substance/ alcohol treatment in 2011, according to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Add those not seeking or unable to afford treatment and the numbers escalate. Marijuana dependence/ abuse is twice as prevalent as with other drugs: 4.2 million Americans (2011), nearly two-thirds of Arizona's population. Nationally, treatment admissions skyrocketed 21 percent (2000-10), with an average age of 25 and nearly three-quarters male. In Arizona, marijuana treatment has surpassed methamphetamine. Marijuana withdrawal has the same symptoms as with other drugs - cravings, irritability, low self-confidence, despondency, depression and suicidal thoughts. I see public opinion swaying toward marijuana legalization and scratch my head. Recovery is possible, but why mainstream a substance of addiction? One in 11 new users will become addicted - one in six who start as teens and up to one in two who smoke it daily. As we strive for global competitiveness and lament poor school performance in comparison with our international peers, we must face the truth about pot. It is more crucial than ever to challenge the impression many teens have that marijuana is a benign, unfairly demonized substance. Regular marijuana use jeopardizes a young person's chance of success - - in school and in life. The National Institute on Drug Abuse warns that habitual teen marijuana use is linked to a significant decrease in IQ of seven to eight points, not to mention school dropout or failure, future drug use and mental-health problems. An eight-point IQ drop is titanic, sinking a person of average intelligence into the lowest third of the range. Nationally, one in 15 high school seniors are regular pot users. The 2012 Arizona Youth Survey found that one in five of Arizona's high-school seniors used pot in the past 30 days and a 14.4 percent cumulative increase in past 30-day use since 2008 for Grades 8, 10 and 12. Parents tell me of their pot using teens falling behind in school while insisting that marijuana is "medicine." Unlike methamphetamine, heroin and the horrific synthetics ("bath salts" or "spice"), marijuana's harms are not readily apparent: no life threatening overdose or deterioration into a gaunt and ravaged figure. The effects are rather subtle: downward life trajectory, erosion of IQ, impaired cognitive development, mental-health issues, low education attainment and the escalation of delinquency. Disintegration over months or years is not easily identified nor does it garner headlines. I see the harms - child abuse inflicted by the neglectful pot-smoking parent; traffic fatalities by the marijuana-impaired driver. I see the subtle signs of destruction in the growing number of addicted young adults. Our job as adults is to create an environment to fuel our kids' success. To that end, we must educate them and the voting public about the value of the brain and the damage of marijuana. Already an uphill battle, the legalization movement feeds teens' perception that marijuana is safe. We can't sit passively by and watch this slow decline. Marijuana harmless? Think again. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom