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Synthetic Marijuana – Problem for U.S. Armed Forces

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

marijuana onlineU.S. troops are increasingly using an easy-to-get herbal mix called “Spice,” which mimics a marijuana high and can bring on hallucinations that last for days.

Abuse of the drug has so alarmed military officials that they’ve launched an aggressive testing program that led to the investigation of more than 1,100 suspected users in 2011, according to military figures.

So-called synthetic pot is readily available on the Internet and has become popular nationwide in recent years. The drug also has stirred controversy in Duluth, which in August 2010 became the first Minnesota city to attempt to ban its sale or possession.

Now synthetic marijuana use among troops and sailors has raised concerns among the Pentagon brass.

“You can just imagine the work that we do in a military environment,” said Mark Ridley, deputy director of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, adding: “You need to be in your right mind when you do a job. That’s why the Navy has always taken a zero-tolerance policy toward drugs.”

Two years ago, only 29 Marines and sailors were investigated for use of Spice. This year, the number topped 700, the investigative service said. Those found guilty of using Spice are kicked out, although the Navy does not track the overall number of dismissals.

The Air Force has punished 497 airmen so far this year, compared to last year’s 380, according to figures provided by the Pentagon. The Army does not track Spice investigations but says it has medically treated 119 soldiers for the synthetic drug in total.

Military officials emphasize those caught represent a tiny fraction of all service members and note none was in a leadership position or believed high while on duty.

Spice is made up of exotic plants from Asia like Blue Lotus and Bay Bean. Their leaves are coated with chemicals that mimic the effects of THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, but are five to 200 times more potent.

More than 40 states have banned some of its chemicals, prompting sellers to turn to the Internet, where it is marketed as incense or potpourri. In some states, Spice is sold at bars, smoke shops and convenience stores. The packets usually say the ingredients are not for human consumption but also tout them as “mood enhancing.”

Service members preferred it because up until this year there was no way to detect it with urine tests. A test was developed after the Drug Enforcement Administration put a one-year emergency ban on five chemicals found in the drug.

Manufacturers are adapting to avoid detection, even on the new tests, and skirt new laws banning the main chemicals.

“It’s a moving target,” said Capt. J.A. “Cappy” Surette, spokesman for the Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery.

The military can calibrate its equipment to test for those five banned chemicals “but underground chemists can keep altering the properties and make up to more than 100 permutations,” Surette said.

Complicating their efforts further, there are more than 200 other chemicals used in the drug. They remain legal and their effects on the mind and body remain largely unknown, Navy doctors say.

A Clemson University scientist created many of the chemicals for research purposes in 1990s. They were never tested on humans.

Civilian deaths have been reported and emergency crews have responded to calls of “hyper-excited” people doing things like tearing off their clothes and running down the street naked.

Navy investigators compare the drug to angel dust because no two batches are the same. Some may just feel a euphoric buzz, but others have suffered delusions lasting up to a week.

While the problem has surfaced in all branches of the military, the Navy has been the most aggressive in drawing attention to the problem.

It produced a video based on cases to warn sailors of the drugs’ dangers and publicized busts of crew members on some of its most-storied ships, including the USS Carl Vinson.

Two of the largest busts this year involved sailors in the San Diego-based U.S. Third Fleet, which announced last month that it planned to dismiss 28 sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan.

A month earlier, 64 sailors, including 49 from the Vinson, were accused of being involved in a Spice ring.

Many of the cases were discovered after one person was caught with the drug, prompting broader investigations.

Lt. Commander Donald Hurst, a fourth-year psychiatry resident at San Diego’s Naval Medical Center, said the hospital is believed to have seen more cases than any other health facility in the country.

Doctors saw users experiencing bad reactions once a month, but now see them weekly. Users suffer everything from vomiting, elevated blood pressure and seizures to extreme agitation, anxiety and delusions.

Hurst said the behavior in many cases he witnessed at first seemed akin to schizophrenia. Usually within minutes, however, the person became completely lucid. Sometimes, the person goes in and out of such episodes for days.

He recalled one especially bizarre case of a sailor who came in with his sobbing wife.

“He stood there holding a sandwich in front of him with no clue as to what to do,” he said. “He opened it up, looked at it, touched it. I took it and folded it over and then he took a bite out it. But then we had to tell him, ‘You have to chew.’”

An hour later when Hurst went back to evaluate him, he was completely normal and worried about being in trouble.

“That’s something you don’t see with acute schizophrenic patients,” he said. “Then we found out based on the numbers of people coming in like this, that OK, there’s a new drug out there.”

Hurst decided to study 10 cases. Some also had smoked marijuana or drunk alcohol, while others only smoked Spice.

Of the 10, nine had lost a sense of reality. Seven babbled incoherently. The symptoms for seven of them lasted four to eight days. Three are believed to now be schizophrenic. Hurst believed the drug may have triggered the symptoms in people with that genetic disposition. His findings were published in the American Journal of Psychiatry in October.

He said there are countless questions that still need answering, including the drug’s effects on people with post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injuries.

Marijuana is Like a Fine Glass of Wine

Friday, November 4th, 2011

best cigarettes onlineKate took the slim, white-painted metal pipe from her husband, Tom. Known as a “one-hitter,” the pipe was disguised to look like a cigarette, with one end colored light brown to resemble a filter.

Kate held a Bic lighter. She fired up the pungent green wad of pot packed into the far end of the pipe and pulled in a lungful of smoke.

She waited: One second. Two seconds. Three.

Finally, she exhaled a thin blue ribbon and smiled.

“I’m a lifer,” Kate said as she sat in her living room. “I’ve been smoking pot for 30 years.”

Kate and Tom live in an upscale neighborhood in DuPage County.

Like an estimated 17 million other Ameri­cans, they’re regular marijuana users.

They’re also among a growing number of Americans who support legalization of the drug. But they’re careful about whom they let know about their habit. That’s why they asked that their full names not be used.

Kate, 48, smokes about five times a week after work and on the weekends. Tom, 52, smokes almost as frequently.

They both have high-paying jobs in the financial industry. And they see themselves as connoisseurs.

“It’s like a fine glass of wine where you twirl it, swish it in your mouth. You savor it,” Kate said. “Some kinds are evergreen-smelling. Some are orangey, sticky. We like to try different strains and compare.”

Kate’s long relationship with marijuana began when she was in high school. Someone at a party dared her to smoke a joint. So she did.

“It was like the scene in the movie ‘Walk Hard,’ ” she said with a laugh. “We were in a bathroom and someone said, ‘You don’t want to do this!’ And I said, ‘Yes I do!’ ”

Kate continued smoking pot through college.

Tom, on the other hand, didn’t start smoking pot regularly until he was almost 30 and working in Chicago’s Financial District. The first two times he tried pot in college, he suffered from splitting headaches. He tried it again as an adult and enjoyed the relaxing feeling he got.

“Very mellow and mild,” he said. “Not like any other drug.”

Kate said she’s never bought marijuana from a drug dealer. There have always been friends of hers who had it and shared it with her.

“I never had to make that inner-city purchase. If I had to go somewhere scary to get it, I probably wouldn’t use it,” she said.

Kate briefly grew pot in her backyard vegetable garden. Her children were young and thought she was drying herbs in her basement. But the quality wasn’t stellar.

“I started to grow it because the one thing that bothered me about pot was that I understood the violence associated with it all,” she said.

Tom has always bought pot from people in the financial world who sell it on the side.

“I have used the same guy for the last four or five years,” he said. “I’ll send him a text message: ‘Can we get together tomorrow?’ He’ll say: ‘The usual?’ ‘Yes,’ I’ll say. ‘Meet you downstairs for a cigarette.’ ”

When Kate and Tom started smoking pot, it was much less potent than it is now.

“In the past, one ounce might be gone in a month,” Tom said. “Now one ounce might last four or five months. You only need to do one or two puffs these days.”

But the “good stuff” isn’t cheap, he said.

He and Kate smoke hydroponically grown sinsemilla — usually from Colorado or California where it’s legally sold for medical purposes. Tom usually spends more than $350 for an ounce.

Kate and Tom have teenage children and they don’t discuss their marijuana habit with them. “They know I wish it was legal,” Kate said.

“They know I’m not against it. But they’re minors and I don’t want to cross that line. It is illegal, after all.”

While Kate and Tom keep to themselves about smoking pot, Dan Linn is very open about it.

That’s because he’s the head of the Illinois chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws — NORML.

Linn, 29, said he started smoking pot in his early teens like Kate. He was an aggressive kid who got into a lot of fights before he started using pot before school every day. He continued to play travel hockey and worked a night job during high school.

“Once I started using cannabis, I started to calm down and focus on activities, whether it was academics, sports or outside hobbies.”

Linn, who now works at a grocery, lobbies the Illinois General Assembly on a variety of marijuana-related bills. He’s pushing for the taxation and legalization of marijuana in Illinois. He supports medical-marijuana legislation, which came eight votes short of passing in May.

Linn said he also backs a proposal to make petty possession of marijuana in Chicago a violation that results in a ticket but no criminal charges. Police, prosecutors and Cook County officials have been studying the idea recently. Separately, several aldermen introduced an ordinance Wednesday to allow cops to write $200 tickets for possession of up to 10 grams of pot.

“I think it would be a step in the right direction,” Linn said.

Linn said he doesn’t always pay for marijuana. Growers give him pot as a “tribute” for his lobbying work. He said he knows medical marijuana growers in Colorado and California who illegally sell some of their weed in Illinois. He also is friends with some indoor growers who live in Chicago and rural Illinois.

“Downstate, you can find counties where the sheriff tells people ‘This is not on my radar. I am not looking to arrest people for this.’ And those growers are expanding their operations,” Linn said. “But I know of stockbrokers, lawyers, people who work on the Board of Trade who grow it, too.”

Kate, Tom and Linn all consider marijuana to be medicine. They know cancer patients who have used marijuana to treat the side effects of their ailments.

And Tom said marijuana alleviates the pain in his knees from playing competitive sports all the way through college.

Experts warn that smoking marijuana has been linked to psychosis in a small but growing number of users. But Kate, Tom and Linn insist marijuana is less dangerous than other drugs or alcohol.

They strongly support the legalization of pot, which they equate with lifting the prohibition on alcohol in the 1933 with the 21st Amendment.

“As far as I know, nobody has ever died from an overdose of cannabis,” Linn said. “People die all the time from alcohol poisoning.”

Tom and Kate sometimes have a cocktail or glass of wine while they are smoking. But Tom said he tells his kids that between alcohol and pot, alcohol is the bigger evil.

“I don’t see how anybody who has sense can say alcohol should be legal but marijuana should be illegal,” Tom said.

And with that, Kate handed Tom the one-hitter — and he took a puff.

Smoking Regulation to Allow Medical Marijuana, Sebastopol News

Monday, October 31st, 2011

best quality dunhill cigarettesWhen is it not OK to smoke a tobacco cigarette in Sebastopol, but OK to smoke a marijuana joint? The City Council will take up the issue Tuesday.

The council adopted new smoking regulations in August 2010. The city attorney is now recommending amending the ordinance to more clearly indicate that the legal use of medicinal cannabis is exempted.

The meeting begins at 6 p.m. at the Sebastopol Youth Annex, 425 Morris St.

Marijuana Smoke in MediLeaf Legal Fight

Friday, October 28th, 2011

best quality winston cigarettesMore than two years after a Gilroy medical marijuana dispensary was shut down for operating without a city business license, a state appellate court has ruled that city officials were in the right by declaring it a “public nuisance” despite prolonged objections by the club’s operators.

In a 36-page opinion filed Tuesday by California’s Sixth District Court of Appeals, Associate Justice Wendy Clark Duffy wrote that the City of Gilroy acted within its power and broke no laws when it ordered MediLeaf to close its doors in August 2010.

City officials are confident the decision is the final nail in the coffin for MediLeaf’s fight, with City Attorney Andrew Faber calling the ruling “a complete judicial victory” in an email sent to Gilroy City Council members Tuesday.

Berliner Cohen, the city’s hired legal firm, is still compiling the final financial tally for Gilroy’s battle to close the dispensary, City Finance Director Christina Turner said. The city spent $202,500 in legal fees as of July, according to attorney bills obtained by the Dispatch, though City Councilman and attorney Perry Woodward predicts the total could approach $300,000 when all is counted.

Though Council members weren’t smiling over the price tag, there were still cheers for the city’s apparent victory.

“Of course, I’m happy. I never thought otherwise to be honest with you. From the beginning, I thought we were well within the law,” Councilwoman Cat Tucker said. “It’s a shame that it would cost so much money and take so long, but we did what we had to do and what the majority of the community wanted us to do.”

MediLeaf reps still have 30 days to submit their case to the state Supreme Court.

“Thirty days before I get a full sigh of relief,” Tucker said.

“I’m very happy that the courts agreed,” Mayor Al Pinheiro wrote in an e-mail Thursday, “and yet it is sad that ultimately the city of Gilroy had to spend so much money in protecting the right to decide what is best for Gilroy.

MediLeaf’s defendants – led by founder Goyko “Batzi” Kuburovich – asserted “various claims of error,” Justice Duffy wrote, including arguments that the dispensary should be allowed under the city’s zoning ordinance, and that prohibiting their operation “was unconstitutional.”

The court ruled their claims were “without merit.”

“We reject appellants’ challenges and conclude that the court properly found that Gilroy was entitled to judgment on its public nuisance claim,” Duffy wrote. “Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment.”

Woodward said the court made the correct decision, but maintained his gripe with the city’s battle against the dispensary has always focused on its climbing legal bills. Woodward – a partner at San Jose law firm Terra Law LLP, said he hasn’t seen the city’s final bill but predicted the $202,500 figure would be “far less” than what it would end up paying. He said the legal battle’s timing couldn’t have been worse.

“When we made this decision, we were laying off firefighters, laying off police officers,” Woodward said. “And to me, it’s just not money well spent.”

Woodward argues the city probably would have been better off allowing the dispensary to operate, though under strict guidelines.

“I would have liked to have seen what was being discussed at the time: I would have preferred to see the city adopt an ordinance that would have strictly regulated the operation, that would have limited the operations to one or two (locations),” Woodward said. “The next thing I had hoped to do was to impose a tax so we could have an additional source of revenue.”

He added, “It seems that the opposition to it was just a philosophical opposition to medical marijuana. So I’d like to get the money back.”

Woodward laughed that a refund was out of the question. And he said Gilroy’s battle against marijuana was far from finished.

“No, of course it’s not over. The issue of medical marijuana is going to go on for all of our lives,” he said. “The younger generation doesn’t see it in the same terms.”

Gilroy isn’t the only spot keeping a close on the MediLeaf saga. Woodward and City Administrator Tom Haglund have also been contacted by the Los Angeles Times for an article examining California cities’ battles with recent marijuana issues, the Dispatch has learned.

While no other marijuana dispensaries exist in Gilroy, Woodward predicted the drug will be fully legalized within the next 10 years, which would make Gilroy’s fight against MediLeaf seem ancient.

“We’re going to look back on this on the same way we look back on prohibition in my view,” he said.

Woodward said the MediLeaf case had some factors that “could be attractive” to the state Supreme Court, but agreed the legal debate was probably dead.

“The supreme court takes very few cases. Any case going to the supreme court is an extreme long shot,” he said.

MediLeaf opened Nov. 9, 2009 without a business license at 1321 First St. because they were operating as a nonprofit, the shop’s owners argued.

Superior Court Judge Kevin Murphy turned down the city’s request for a preliminary injunction Dec. 15, 2009 that would have shut down MediLeaf pending a trial, partly because of accusations that the city had violated the Brown Act during a closed session discussion Nov. 16.

The Council voted 4-3 in open sessions Dec. 30 to approve litigation. Mayor Al Pinheiro and Council members Cat Tucker, Dion Bracco and Bob Dillon voted yes in favor of the resolution. Woodward, along with Councilmen Peter Arellano and Craig Gartman voted against it.

MediLeaf was forced to close Aug. 9, 2010 after Superior Court Judge Kevin McKenney issued an eight-page order on July 20 upholding the city’s claim that MediLeaf was operating illegally following a Gilroy lawsuit.

Attorneys for MediLeaf filed a notice to appeal the prohibitory injunction the day after McKenney’s Santa Clara County court decision and requested the dispensary be allowed to operate during the appeals process. McKenney denied MediLeaf’s request on Sept. 13, 2010.

The dispensary maintains it used a not-for-profit model and therefore did not require a business license.

On Dec. 9, 2010, dozens of undercover law enforcement officers from across Santa Clara County raided eight homes and MediLeaf offices in Gilroy, Morgan Hill and San Jose as part of an eight-month investigation of illegal sales of marijuana and money laundering into the medicinal pot club.

The MediLeaf search warrant obtained by the Dispatch names the six people who law enforcement refused to release at the time of the warrant: founder Goyoko “Batzi” Kuburovich, 50, Patricia Kuburovich, 46, Kristel Kuburovich, 21, Neil Forrest, 58, Bruce Ziegelman, 53, and Kevin Keifer, 54.

Charges have not been filed against MediLeaf’s proprieters as of Thursday, said Lisa McCrary, spokeswoman for the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office.

Calls to “Batzi” Kuburovich and Forrest on Thursday were not returned as of press time.

Councilman Dion Bracco, who along with Councilman Woodward is running for the city’s mayoral seat in 2012, called Tuesday’s court decision “good news,” and said he doesn’t think MediLeaf will have a chance to continue its fight.

“According to our legal counsel, they don’t believe the high court would even listen to it,” Bracco said. “They’ve lost every step of the way. Who would believe they would finally win something?”

Bracco also called the city’s hefty legal bills “the cost of doing business.”

“A city can operate as it sees fit. They can’t just come in and do what they feel like and get away with it,” he said. “The way it’s set up, they have nothing to lose by filing these frivolous lawsuits. We have to defend our city. Otherwise, people can do whatever they feel like and get away with it.”

He added, “If you’re going to run your city according to price sheet or make decisions on how much it costs someone to fight your decisions, I don’t know what type of city you’d be living in.”

Smoking Weed Is Still Cool

Friday, September 9th, 2011

cheapest cosmos cigarettesIf the world of drugs was a high school prom, Marijuana would be prom King and methamphetamine would be the alienated pimply kid in the trench coat. That about sums up this year’s survey by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration finding that pot-smoking is on the rise, while meth use has plunged by about half in the last few years. USA Today reports:

Marijuana, with about 17.4 million regular users, is by far the most commonly used drug. Its popularity is growing: 6.9% of the population reported using marijuana regularly and Cosmos cigarettes, up from 5.8% in 2007, the survey found. Among 12- to 17-year-olds, 7.4% reported having used marijuana in the past month, about the same as last year.

Meanwhile, methamphetamine use, which raced across the USA for a decade, has declined sharply. The number of past-month users declined from 731,000 in 2006 to 353,000 in 2010.

So what caused meth to fall out of favor, while pot remains as popular as ever? Well, besides the fact that meth use is associated with depression, suicide, schizophrenia and psychosis, Peter Delany, director of SAMHSA, says cracking down on the sale of ingredients that go into homemade meth has made all the difference. “We’ve seen better attention for law enforcement and policy changes. You can’t get all the Sudafed you want anymore,” Delany says.

As for pot’s popularity, Gil Kerlikowske, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, blames it on the loosening of medical marijuana laws across the country. “People keep calling it medicine, and that’s the wrong message for young people to hear,” she said.

Try Smoking Marijuana to Fight Obesity

Monday, September 5th, 2011

cheapest karelia cigarettesThe rapture is still right around the corner, but even if we somehow get past that cataclysmic event, America has other problems—like the fact that half the population will be obese by 2030. But there may be a solution: start smoking marijuana!

That’s what new research out of France suggests, although researchers decidedly do not recommend that course. Because marijuana increases appetite, researchers hypothesized that users would be more obese than non users.

But they discovered the opposite: “We found that cannabis users are less likely to be obese than non-users. We were so surprised, we thought we had made a mistake. Or that our results were due to the sample we studied. So we turned to another completely independent sample and found exactly the same association,” says Dr. Yann Le Strat, a psychiatrist at Louis-Mourier Hospital in Colombes, France and co-author of a new study in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Obesity rates among participants in the two surveys who didn’t smoke pot were 22 percent and 25.3 percent; those who do smoking pot at least three days a week had obesity rates of 14.3 percent and 17.2 percent. Le Strat warns that there could be “confounding factors”—pot users might exercise more, be outdoors more, eat more fruits and vegetables—and doesn’t think the take-home message should be ‘smoke cannabis, it will help you lose weight.’

But Andrea Giancoli, a Los Angeles-based registered dietitian and spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association, says that maybe it’s time we started thinking differently about the typical pot head: “I know when we think about smoking pot or about smoking Karelia cigarette, one of the jokes is that it gives you the munchies and dry mouth so you drink a bunch of water and eat a bunch of Cheetos. Maybe we need to adjust the stereotype.”

And while neither Le Strat nor Giancoli recommend people start smoking pot to lose weight, we can’t help but wonder what might happen if a certain overweight Governor stayed away from the helicopters, fatty foods, and beaches for awhile and got in touch with his inner Snoop Dogg.

Teen Marijuana Use is on the Rise

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

pall mall cigarettes onlineMarijuana is one of the most commonly used illicit drugs in America and a prime candidate for legalization in the not-so-distant future.

Given these twin facts, it is not surprising that marijuana use is on the rise for teens and that they question the harmfulness of periodically smoking Pall Mall cigarettes a joint. After all, they argue, it isn’t like heroin or cocaine, where taking it once might kill me.

It is also understandable that many adults — especially those who experimented with marijuana in their youth – feel uncomfortable discussing this drug with their child.

My hope is that parents will use the information below to talk with their teen about abstinence and/or harm reduction if drug use has already begun (e.g., not driving and/or engaging in risky sexual behavior while under the influence).

What Is Marijuana?

Marijuana is a dry, shredded, brown and green mix of seeds, leaves, stems, and flowers derived from the hemp plant Cannabis sativa that contains THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol), a powerful psychoactive or mind-altering chemical.

The plant itself is easy to grow and relatively inexpensive to purchase.

According to the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, marijuana is a Schedule 1 drug. This means it is illegal to buy, possess, manufacture, process, or distribute without a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) license. Distributors and users both can be sentenced to jail time.

Street names for marijuana include pot, weed, Mary Jane, reefer, ganja, gangster, boom, and grass.

How It Works

Marijuana can be smoked in many ways. It can be rolled in the form of a cigarette (joint), mixed with tobacco and put it inside a hollowed-out cigar (blunt), or used in a pipe (bong).

The drug can also be brewed as a tea and/or cooked inside food. Perhaps the most well-known culinary product is “Alice B. Toklas brownies.” Made famous in the 1960s, these are ordinary brownies with chopped up marijuana added to the batter before cooking.

Why is marijuana pleasurable?

The simple answer is that regardless of how it is ingested, the drug increases the supply of dopamine – a “feel good” chemical – in the user’s brain, creating euphoria or a “high.” The following effects appear within a few minutes of inhaling, peak after about 10 to 30 minutes, and wear off within 2 to 3 hours.

However, this enjoyment carries with it some risk, as seen below in the section on negative consequences.

Who Is Using Marijuana?

The NIDA-funded 2010 Monitoring the Future Study (MTF) indicates that marijuana use has become increasingly popular for students in the 8th, 10th, and 12th grades, while their perceived health risk of using this drug continues to decline.

Most dramatic is the rise in reported daily marijuana use for all three grades.

Current reported daily use rates are 6.1 percent of 12th graders, 3.3 percent of 10th graders, and 1.2 percent of 8th graders compared to 2009 rates of 5.2 percent, 2.8 percent, and 1.0 percent, respectively.

For high school seniors — many of whom are new drivers — this reflects a daily or near-daily marijuana use by nearly one in sixteen students.

Equally powerful is the decline in student belief that using this drug is risky.

This perception decreased nearly 6 percent for 12th graders (from 52.4 percent in 2009 to 46.8 percent in 2010) and more than 2 percent for 10th graders (from 59.5 percent in 2009 to 57.2 percent in 2010).

There is no reason to believe these statistics are any different for local middle and high school students.

Clearly, both school and community prevention efforts are not enough. It is critical that parents educate themselves and their teens about the nature and potential consequences of marijuana use on developing minds and bodies.

Potentially harmful consequences of marijuana begin almost immediately after the first inhale, or toke. Within minutes, heart rate increases, bronchial passages relax and become enlarged, and eye blood vessels expand creating the red eyes associated with using the drug.

Heart rate may increase by 20 to 50 beats per minute over the usual rate of 70 to 80 beats or may even double. Evidence suggests that heart attack risk during the first hour after smoking marijuana is as much as four times the person’s usual risk.

In addition, THC negatively impacts parts of the brain that regulate balance, posture, coordination, and reaction time, causing immediate impairment in:
These adverse responses are likely to end as soon as the drug wears off. There are, however, potential long-term effects of chronic marijuana use. Researchers agree that:

Daily or near-daily use of marijuana has the potential to create impairment in memory, learning skills, sleep patterns, and school performance

As many as one in six individuals who start using marijuana as teens become addicted to it

For youth with a family history of psychosis or schizophrenia, the risk of developing such psychoses in adulthood is significantly increased for those smoking marijuana five or more times a week.

Finally, the purity of street-purchased marijuana cannot be ascertained by visual inspection. The possibility that it has been laced with another, more dangerous substance such as cocaine, crack, PCP, or even embalming fluid exists with each buy.

As always, the keys to having a productive conversation are respectful listening and making it clear that health and safety are your prime concerns. Don’t be afraid to discuss the harm reduction strategies mentioned earlier. It is better that your child has a plan for action (or inaction) before his or her inhibitions are reduced by the drug.

If you can, make a contract with your teen that he will not engage in risky behaviors and will call you if she cannot handle the situation or need a ride home.

Finally, use the services of a counselor trained in this area if you still have questions. Trust that every effort you make will pay lifelong dividends to your child.