Pubdate: Sun, 14 Sep 2014 Source: Irish Independent (Ireland) Copyright: Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd Contact: http://www.independent.ie/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/213 Cited: http://drugsense.org/url/YrpHq1ck Lancet Psychiatry WE MUST PROTECT OUR TEENS FROM DANGERS OF CANNABIS New Research That Links Cannabis With Depression and Suicide in Teens Is Nothing Short of Alarming One of the more idiotic statements made by Bill Clinton throughout his career was that as a student he smoked cannabis, but didn't inhale. That statement sprang to mind during the week when the results of a study on cannabis use in the student generation, were published in the medical journal The Lancet. But at least, despite his somewhat ambivalent moral attitude, ex-President Clinton's progress in life was not impeded. Others in his own age group and younger may not have been so lucky: The Lancet research found that young people who smoke cannabis daily in their teen years are 18 times more likely to become dependent on the drug than those who have never smoked it. They are also eight times more likely to use other illicit drugs than those who never smoked cannabis. But the most startling and disturbing finding was that daily users of cannabis in the teen years are seven times more likely to take their own lives than others in their peer group, with the risks increasing according to the level of dosage. The study was carried out by researchers in Australia and New Zealand by an academic team who followed nearly four thousand participants. All the participants had begun using cannabis before the age of 17 and they were monitored to the age of 30. Teenagers who smoke cannabis regularly before the age of 17 are 60 times less likely to finish school than those who don't. The research also found significant links between frequent cannabis use among young people and depression. Alarming figures all. But what does it mean in practice here in Ireland? For a start, we know that an average of one Irish teenager under the age of 17 dies by suicide every month.Depression almost always plays a part. Equally, we know that the National Council on Drugs and Alcohol here in Ireland have published figures to show that 4.5pc of 15 to 34-year-olds in Ireland had taken cannabis in the month prior to being questioned on usage. We don't have figures for under 15s here (as usual, we don't investigate anything until it's too late), but The Lancet study found that 4pc of 11 to 15-year-olds in England had taken the drug in the previous month. Are we any different? I doubt it, given that another finding of European comparative statistics has shown that 28pc of Irish teenagers have used cannabis within the previous month, compared with the EU average of 17pc. It sounds like seriously bad news for those campaigning for the legalisation of cannabis. But the leader of the Australian/New Zealand research team, Professor Edmund Sillins of the University of New South Wales, in commenting on their findings, suggested that "efforts to reform cannabis legislation should be carefully assessed to ensure they reduce adolescent cannabis use and prevent potentially adverse effects on adolescent development." In other words, if an adult wants to fry his or her brains, maybe they should be allowed to do so; but we have a responsibility to youngsters. And we got some interesting views from what could loosely be called the Irish "generation cannabis" on Thursday, when reporter Colm Flynn went on the Dublin streets for The John Murray Show to ask young men and women about their cannabis usage. It was random, but very few were not users to one degree or another. A woman student from Belfast said she'd noticed that cannabis use was much more prevalent in Dublin among students, probably because "Dublin was much more social than Belfast". A 26-year-old man who was almost incoherent said he'd begun smoking hash around the age of 14. It hadn't affected his schooling, because he'd already been "thrun' owa school." Nowadays, he smokes weed, all the time, because "it's more clean than hash." He does it because it means "you don't feel pain..." and "you get paranoid without it." Other young-sounding male voices also said they'd begun what was now a daily habit "around second year" in school. The general consensus was that to smoke once or twice a week was "not much", although one interviewee commented that you always knew when someone was a regular user: they became "mentally soft, more distant." One of those occasional users was a 25-year-old woman who readily agreed that it could lead to dangerous levels of depression, including suicide. She certainly had two family members whose usage made them paranoid, put them into cannabis psychosis and deep depression, and led one to suicide. She didn't sound all that bothered, though. I don't have much in common with MEP Ming Flanagan. But I used to agree with him about legalising pot/cannabis/hash for adults, and concentrating drug-fighting resources on heavy drugs. That was because I considered cannabis pretty harmless, and certainly did not put people in danger of psychosis. Not anymore; with these figures, Ming and I have even less in common. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom