Pubdate: Wed, 07 Oct 2015 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2015 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 UNDERAGE POT USE NEEDS CONTAINMENT AS THE LEGAL RECREATIONAL MARKET EXPANDS No sooner than 21-and-over Oregonians showed a joyous and happily unremarkable debut of the legal sale of recreational pot last week than a report was issued Tuesday showing 1 in 3 Multnomah County residents aged 18 to 25 used the drug in the past month - higher than the rest of the state and the nation. It would be wrong to infer that Multnomah County's young adults are pot heads. But the numbers are significant in that a portion of the so-called young people represented in government health surveys were under the age of 21 and engaged in illegal consumption of pot at rates above state and national levels. But that's just the legal end of it. If the numbers hold - the report's data years ended in 2012 - the health implications for adolescents are more worrisome and underscore a challenge now before the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, at work refining rules to regulate the promotion and sale of recreational marijuana in such a way that protects young Oregonians from being enticed by the drug. The human brain grows and develops, typically, through age 25. Noelle Crombie of The Oregonian/OregonLive reported on the findings, among them that two-thirds of Multnomah County 11th-graders said it would be easy to buy pot and a like number saying pot was easier to buy than cigarettes. Moreover, cannabis consumption among young adults was found to have spiked from 25 percent in 2003-2004 to 32 percent in 2010-2012. There's no telling what the numbers are today, now that recreational pot is legal for adults. The impact of cannabis consumption upon the developing adolescent brain is a squirrelly subject. Federal prohibition of the drug has choked funding for comprehensive research. Yet health professionals have become increasingly ardent in their assertions that pot can damage young people. Dr. Krista Lisdahl, director of the brain imaging and neuropsychology lab at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, last year cited a study that tracked subjects from birth to age 38 and found that those who'd become addicted to pot could lose an average of six IQ points by adulthood. Significantly, she was joined by other psychologists at the conference of the American Psychological Association who argued frequent marijuana use among teenagers and young adults could be implicated in cognitive decline, and poor memory and attention. Deeper research could substantiate or repudiate the assertions. But Multnomah County's health officer, Dr. Paul Lewis, was spot-on in telling Crombie: "We are not necessarily holding ourselves to the highest standard of proof, but because it's youth, we want to be very cautious even if we don't know the consequences." Later this year and early next, the county will wisely post public health messages on marijuana's potential risks on billboards. Prohibition of recreational marijuana for adults was a costly error for too many years, pushing otherwise law-abiding Oregonians into criminal behavior accommodated by an unregulated black market. The passage of Measure 91 to allow the legal sale of recreational pot to adults was correct. But the numbers showing Multnomah County teens using pot at higher rates than the rest of the state and the country warrant hard attention. The drug has been easy to get and, now, with adults buying recreational pot legally from potentially more than 100 outlets in Portland and up to 300 statewide, extra care to protect young people must be a first priority. The Oregon Health Authority, which oversees Oregon's medical marijuana program, already requires dispensaries to post pot's potential risks to women who are pregnant or nursing and urges that clients keep their pot locked up and away from children. The OLCC, meanwhile, does not exist to modify underage behavior. But it can and must mandate a robust outreach to dissuade the under-21 crowd from illegally obtaining and smoking pot. Among other things, that means communicating potential risks at the point of retail sale, where adult buyers can receive and carry the message home along with their weed. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom