Pubdate: Wed, 10 Sep 2014 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2014 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/mUgeOPdZ Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Christopher Ingraham Page: A3 Note: Excerpted from Wonkblog, at washingtonpost.com/wonkblog. Cited: http://drugsense.org/url/YrpHq1ck Lancet Psychiatry STUDY: BAD OUTCOMES FOR TEEN POT USERS Daily Smokers Found to Be Less Likely to Finish High School Teenagers who smoke marijuana daily are more than 60 percent less likely to complete high school than those who never use. They're also 60 percent less likely to graduate from college and seven times as likely to attempt suicide, says a new study of adolescent cannabis use Tuesday in the Lancet Psychiatry, a British journal of health research. Researchers gathered data on the frequency of cannabis use among 3,725 students from Australia and New Zealand and looked at the students' developmental outcomes up to the age of 30. They found "clear and consistent associations between frequency of cannabis use during adolescence and most young adult outcomes investigated, even after controlling for 53 potential confounding factors including age, sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, use of other drugs, and mental illness." Significantly, they found that the risks of negative outcomes increased with the frequency of cannabis use. But in a conference call, study co-author Edmund Silins said that the relationship between cannabis use and negative outcomes is significant even at low levels of use, as in less than monthly, and that "the results suggest that there may not be a threshold where use can be deemed safe" for teens. According to the study, there are significant relationships between cannabis use and high school graduation, college graduation, suicide attempts, cannabis dependency and other illicit drug use. For instance, a person who uses cannabis less than monthly would have slightly lower odds of graduating from high school or getting a college degree compared with a person who doesn't use at all. Increased use further decreases this likelihood, the study says. On the other hand, a person who uses cannabis monthly would be about four times as likely to become dependent on cannabis as a person who doesn't use at all. The findings are likely to be cited by opponents of liberalized marijuana laws, such as the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the Smart Approaches to Marijuana project. But it is important to put them in proper context. First, the causality isn't 100 percent clear. The researchers did a painstaking job of trying to account for a number of confounding factors. But when it comes to the educational outcomes, there are a lot of factors at play. For instance, if a teacher knows or even suspects that a certain student is using drugs, that may predispose the teacher against that student. "Teachers are very likely to stigmatize drug users," said Joseph Palamar, coauthor of another recent study comparing teen marijuana and alcohol use. "That stereotype gives kids problems, and that kid's not going to want to go to class." Palamar also said that because marijuana "is an illegal drug, you have to buy it in an illegal manner, and then you're exposed to the black market. Marijuana use is affiliating you with other kids, some of whom might be problematic - people more likely to question authority. You become affiliated with things that might have a negative impact on your education." Moreover, Palamar's research shows that because of marijuana's legal status, teen cannabis users are much more likely to get into trouble with the police than teen alcohol users. And in many cases, if you have a drug conviction on your record you become ineligible for college aid. "If you get caught with drugs, you're not able to go to college," he said. In other words, many of the problems associated with teen cannabis use likely are a function of the drug's illegal status. But the study lends support for efforts to keep the drug out of the hands of teens and makes a case for closely monitoring adolescent marijuana use in states that legalize it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom