Pubdate: Thu, 11 May 2017 Source: Orillia Today (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.simcoe.com/orillia-on Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1508 Author: Andrew Philips Page: A1 Cited: https://uwaterloo.ca/propel/ POT USE UP AMONG TEENS Study indicates teens smoking marijuana more than tobacco Mary Jane appears to be overtaking the Marlboro Man as the plant of choice among high-school students. "We all know about the problems with cigarettes," said Orillia high school student Brayden, 17. "They're bad for your health, but the long-term effects of marijuana are way better." A new study by the University of Waterloo's Propel Centre for Population Health Impact suggests cannabis has replaced cigarettes as the inhalation product of choice among students in grades 7 to 12. The study determined that 2% of Canadian students in grades 7 to 12 - equivalent to more than 43,000 students nationwide - use marijuana every day. Daily smoking is similar at 1.8%, according to the Canadian Student Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey. Occasional cannabis use remains high among youth with one in five students reportedly trying it and one in 10 saying they've used it in the last 30 days. Occasional cannabis use remains high among youth with one in five students reportedly trying it and one in 10 saying they've used it in the last 30 days. "Although Canadian youth are less likely to try marijuana than they were a decade ago, the number using on a daily basis is surprisingly high," said David Hammond, a professor in the School of Public Health and Health Systems at Waterloo and co-author of the supplement. Brayden's friends differed on how many youth actually smoke pot, with Dakota, 17, saying about half of his school's student population partake, while Austin, 17, felt the percentage is likely closer to a quarter. "With pot, you get a better head-rush than you do with cigarettes," Dakota said, noting that parties usually have an almost-even split nowadays between alcohol and pot use. "Most kids do it (smoke pot)." While that's debatable, the study's findings seem jive with what the the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit has determined. "We've seen a comparable rise in marijuana use in youth," said Doug Ironside, a public health nurse (injury and substance misuse prevention) with the agency's community and family health department. "Our figures mirror the Waterloo study." According to Ironside, about one-third of high school students in the region report using pot once in the past calendar year with one in 10 reporting weekly use. "Everyday use is a really high-risk behaviour. Regular ongoing use is particularly harmful to youth." Ironside, who noted the health unit recognizes that many youth are going to experiment with alcohol and cannabis, said regular marijuana use impairs brain development in youth since the brain (especially the pre-frontal cortex) continues to grow and mature until one reaches 25 years old. According to Ironside, while many youth perceive cannabis to be harmless, natural and not likely to result in dependence, these are misconceptions since marijuana can be used as a coping mechanism, stress reliever or escape and has the potential to become addictive. "It can impair reasoning, impair judgment and make school very challenging," Ironside said, adding that marijuana is also harmful to the lungs, causing many of the same problems that tobacco smoke does, including cough, bronchitis and heightened cancer risk. Teen cigarette smoking, meanwhile, is down in not only the health unit's catchment area, but also across the province. "We're continuing to make inroads in that regard," Ironside said, adding the same can't be said for pot use, especially given the federal government's plan to make it legal next year. "We know from research that increased access leads to increased use. So there is a potential for increased use and increased harm. It's going to create a litany of other public health issues to address." Patterns of co-using tobacco and cannabis have changed dramatically over the past 20 years, according to the Waterloo report, which noted that 92% of tobacco users reported also using cannabis compared to 16% in 1991. "This clustering of marijuana and tobacco use is a concern," Hammond said. "It is a myth that marijuana smoke is less harmful to inhale than tobacco smoke. Marijuana smoke contains many of the same carcinogens as cigarette smoke." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt