Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2014 Source: New Haven Register (CT) Copyright: 2014 New Haven Register Contact: http://www.nhregister.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/292 Author: Cate Bourke Note: Tri-Town Youth Service Cate Bourke is a prevention coordinator at Tri-Town Youth Services, based in Deep River. Page: A12 LOOKING AT THE SCIENCE BEHIND MARIJUANA If we are the parents or guardians of infants, toddlers, young children, we may be telling ourselves that we have nothing to be concerned about regarding the current marijuana controversies. By the time our kids are tweens and teens, our story goes, issues related to marijuana (decriminalization, medicalization, and legalization) will be settled once and for all, and settled with the health and safety of our kids in mind. If, instead, our kids are tweens or teens today, when our young people tell us that pot is very easy to acquire or that "everybody smokes weed," we're definitely relieved that "it's just marijuana" and not some more formidable drug they can easily get. And if we'd ever used marijuana ourselves we may think, "What's the big deal? I smoked pot and I turned out OK." It may serve us - and our kids - very well to let these stories go for a moment and look at the science. Science has a way of advancing/updating our stories. For instance, consider our solar system. We used to believe it was heliocentric, that is, our planets rotated around a fixed sun. But today we depict our solar system itself as racing through space at 43,000-plus miles an hour; the sun is not fixed but behaves more like a comet, dragging our planets behind it in a helical wake. Yikes! That's an astoundingly different story than we've been telling ourselves up till now, and complex, and somewhat difficult for us to fully wrap our brains around. Advanced imaging technologies have not only better informed us about the skies; they have led to similar astounding discoveries about the human brain itself, and particularly the developing adolescent brain. A decade ago, the story we were told about the human brain was that it achieved its adult size before puberty. Ah, brain development complete, we thought, and attributed the changes and challenges of adolescence to "hormones." But, just like our solar system story, the truth about the human brain is much more complex than we realized. As it turns out, "gray matter," or regions of the brain involved in muscle control, sensory perception, memory, emotions, speech, decision making and self-control, are adult-sized before puberty. Yet these regions remain highly discreet or minimally connected at puberty, while "white matter," or brain circuitry, development has only just begun. Between puberty and young adulthood (approximately age 25), science now informs us, a 100 billion discreet neurons - as many cells as stars in the Milky Way galaxy - learn to link instantly in circuits through trillions of pathways in the human brain. It is this process of pathway construction and neural connection that's hijacked, damaged, possibly permanently when an adolescent uses marijuana regularly. Dosage and frequency - how much and how often one uses during this critical developmental period - matter too. So why aren't the use of marijuana or alcohol so detrimental to adults? Waiting until the brain has fully matured to use any intoxicating substance protects the brain while it's under construction. Second only to the period of brain SMS: development between the ages of zero to age 3, the brain is most at risk and at promise in the adolescent. Project SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana), a nonpartisan alliance of lawmakers, scientists and other concerned citizens was joined by the American Society of Addiction Medicine and dozens of other groups in launching the ad, "Perception/ Reality," depicting a young laidback man's face ("perception") juxtaposed over the body of high-powered business executive's body ("reality") implying that if America is not careful, we will soon have a very large, powerful marijuana industry on our hands. Decriminalization and medicalization of marijuana (enacted in CT in 2011 and 2012, respectively) won't change brain development facts. Such legislation has been shown, though, to decrease youth perception of risk and increase youth accessibility to marijuana. After medical marijuana legislation passed in Colorado, 70 percent of youth in treatment for marijuana addiction or dependence in that state reported they acquired marijuana from a medical marijuana cardholder. By 2013, Colorado and Washington state legalized the recreational use of marijuana for individuals over the age of 21. It would seem wise to keep our eyes and ears open to the outcomes for youth on the west coast. One out of six people who begin using marijuana in adolescence will suffer from addiction, possibly throughout their lifespan. And several studies suggest that frequent adolescent use that continues into one's 30s can result in a drop of 6 to 8 IQ points. Regarding medicalization (the legalization of a doctor's recommendation and a patient's use of marijuana to mitigate the impact of certain medical conditions), a story of "compassionate care" has successfully moved the marijuana industry closer to more widespread legalization of recreational use. That's not to say there is no merit in these stories. But what about our kids? There's a belief in the industry that legalization is inevitable; freedom of choice is the American way. So let's be sure we know the facts and share the truth about the risks with our kids. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom