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Marijuana Use:
Its Impact & Problems
| Course Number |
LWD601
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| Objectives |
At the end of this course, you will
1. understand the nature of
marijuana use, 2. counteract the myth of medical marijuana, 3.
appreciate the scope of its use, and 4.
trace its acute affect on the body system. |
| Credit Hours and Fee |
3.0 CE Credit Hours with a fee of $24.00 |
| Instructor |
Rudolf Klimes, PhD (Indiana University), MPH
(Johns Hopkins University), Adjunct Professor at Folsom Lake College,
Folsom, CA. |
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TEST
Smokers become addicts. They keep smoking because they
find pleasure in it and because it relieves stress.
There are better ways to enjoy life and deal with stress. All information is
based on scientific research about what will give you the best chances of
quitting. Adapted from
http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/tobacco/consquits.htm and
www,smokefree.gov

1. Marijuana Basics
| Marijuana, the Drug Marijuana
is the most commonly used illicit drug in the United States.
A dry, shredded green/brown mix of flowers, stems, seeds,
and leaves of the hemp plant Cannabis sativa, it usually is
smoked as a cigarette (joint, nail), or in a pipe (bong). It
also is smoked in blunts, which are cigars that have been
emptied of tobacco and refilled with marijuana, often in
combination with another drug. Use also might include mixing
marijuana in food or brewing it as a tea. As a more
concentrated, resinous form it is called hashish and, as a
sticky black liquid, hash oil. Marijuana smoke has a pungent
and distinctive, usually sweet-and-sour odor. There are
countless street terms for marijuana including pot, herb,
weed, grass, widow, ganja, and hash, as well as terms
derived from trademarked varieties of cannabis, such as
Bubble Gum®, Northern Lights®, Juicy Fruit®, Afghani #1®,
and a number of Skunk varieties.
The main active chemical in marijuana is THC
(delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol). The membranes of certain
nerve cells in the brain contain protein receptors that bind
to THC. Once securely in place, THC kicks off a series of
cellular reactions that ultimately lead to the high that
users experience when they smoke marijuana.
Extent of Use
There were an estimated 2.6 million new marijuana users in
2001. This number is similar to the numbers of new users
each year since 1995, but above the number in 1990 (1.6
million). In 2002, over 14 million Americans age 12 and
older used marijuana at least once in the month prior to
being surveyed, and 12.2 percent of past year marijuana
users used marijuana on 300 or more days in the past 12
months. This translates into 3.1 million people using
marijuana on a daily or almost daily basis over a 12-month
period(1).
The percentage of youth age 12 to 17 who had ever used
marijuana declined slightly from 2001 to 2002 (21.9 to 20.6
percent). Among adults age 18 to 25, the rate increased
slightly from 53.0 percent to 53.8 percent in 2002. The
percentage of young adults age 18 to 25 who had ever used
marijuana was 5.1 percent in 1965, but increased steadily to
54.4 percent in 1982. Although the rate for young adults
declined somewhat from 1982 to 1993, it did not drop below
43 percent and actually increased to 53.8 percent by 2002(1).
Forty-two percent of youth age 12 or 13 and 24.1 percent age
16 or 17 perceived smoking marijuana once a month as a great
risk. Slightly more than half of youth age 12 to 17
indicated that it would be fairly or very easy to obtain
marijuana, but only 26.0 percent of 12- or 13-year-olds
indicated the same thing. However, 79.0 percent of those age
16 or 17 indicated that it would be fairly or very easy to
obtain marijuana(1).
Prevalence of lifetime, past year, and past month marijuana
use declined among students in 8th, 10th, and 12th grades in
2003. However, the declines in 12-month prevalence reached
statistical significance only in 8th-graders; past year use
has declined by nearly one-third since 1996(2).
All three grades showed an increase in perceived risk for
regular marijuana use. This finding represents a welcome
turnaround in this perception, which has been in decline in
all grades over the past 1 or 2 years(3).
In 2002, marijuana was the third most commonly abused drug
mentioned in drug-related hospital emergency department (ED)
visits in the continental United States. Marijuana mentions
rose significantly (24%) from 2000 to 2002, but showed no
significant increase since 2001. Taking changes in
population into account, marijuana mentions increased 139
percent from 1995 to 2002(4).
Effects on the Brain
Scientists have learned a great deal about how THC acts in
the brain to produce its many effects. When someone smokes
marijuana, THC rapidly passes from the lungs into the
bloodstream, which carries the chemical to organs throughout
the body, including the brain.
In the brain, THC connects to specific sites called
cannabinoid receptors on nerve cells and influences the
activity of those cells. Some brain areas have many
cannabinoid receptors; others have few or none. Many
cannabinoid receptors are found in the parts of the brain
that influence pleasure, memory, thought, concentration,
sensory and time perception, and coordinated movement(5).
The short-term effects of marijuana can include problems
with memory and learning; distorted perception; difficulty
in thinking and problem solving; loss of coordination; and
increased heart rate. Research findings for long-term
marijuana use indicate some changes in the brain similar to
those seen after long-term use of other major drugs of
abuse. For example, cannabinoid (THC or synthetic forms of
THC) withdrawal in chronically exposed animals leads to an
increase in the activation of the stress-response system(6)
and changes in the activity of nerve cells containing
dopamine(7). Dopamine neurons are
involved in the regulation of motivation and reward, and are
directly or indirectly affected by all drugs of abuse.
Effects on the Heart
One study has indicated that a user’s risk of heart attack
more than quadruples in the first hour after smoking
marijuana(8). The researchers suggest
that such an effect might occur from marijuana’s effects on
blood pressure and heart rate and reduced oxygen-carrying
capacity of blood.
Effects on the Lungs
A study of 450 individuals found that people who smoke
marijuana frequently but do not smoke tobacco have more
health problems and miss more days of work than nonsmokers(9).
Many of the extra sick days among the marijuana smokers in
the study were for respiratory illnesses.
Even infrequent use can cause burning and stinging of the
mouth and throat, often accompanied by a heavy cough.
Someone who smokes marijuana regularly may have many of the
same respiratory problems that tobacco smokers do, such as
daily cough and phlegm production, more frequent acute chest
illness, a heightened risk of lung infections, and a greater
tendency to obstructed airways(10).
Smoking marijuana increases the likelihood of developing
cancer of the head or neck, and the more marijuana smoked
the greater the increase(11). A study
comparing 173 cancer patients and 176 healthy individuals
produced strong evidence that marijuana smoking doubled or
tripled the risk of these cancers.
Marijuana use also has the potential to promote cancer of
the lungs and other parts of the respiratory tract because
it contains irritants and carcinogens(12, 13).
In fact, marijuana smoke contains 50 to 70 percent more
carcinogenic hydrocarbons than does tobacco smoke(14).
It also produces high levels of an enzyme that converts
certain hydrocarbons into their carcinogenic form—levels
that may accelerate the changes that ultimately produce
malignant cells(15). Marijuana users
usually inhale more deeply and hold their breath longer than
tobacco smokers do, which increases the lungs’ exposure to
carcinogenic smoke. These facts suggest that, puff for puff,
smoking marijuana may increase the risk of cancer more than
smoking tobacco.
Other Health Effects
Some of marijuana’s adverse health effects may occur because
THC impairs the immune system’s ability to fight off
infectious diseases and cancer. In laboratory experiments
that exposed animal and human cells to THC or other
marijuana ingredients, the normal disease-preventing
reactions of many of the key types of immune cells were
inhibited(16). In other studies, mice
exposed to THC or related substances were more likely than
unexposed mice to develop bacterial infections and tumors(17,
18).
Effects of Heavy Marijuana Use on Learning and Social
Behavior
Depression(19), anxiety(20),
and personality disturbances(21) have
been associated with marijuana use. Research clearly
demonstrates that marijuana has potential to cause problems
in daily life or make a person’s existing problems worse.
Because marijuana compromises the ability to learn and
remember information, the more a person uses marijuana the
more he or she is likely to fall behind in accumulating
intellectual, job, or social skills. Moreover, research has
shown that marijuana’s adverse impact on memory and learning
can last for days or weeks after the acute effects of the
drug wear off(22, 23).
Students who smoke marijuana get lower grades and are less
likely to graduate from high school, compared with their
non-smoking peers(24, 25, 26, 27). A
study of 129 college students found that, for heavy users of
marijuana (those who smoked the drug at least 27 of the
preceding 30 days), critical skills related to attention,
memory, and learning were significantly impaired even after
they had not used the drug for at least 24 hours(28).
The heavy marijuana users in the study had more trouble
sustaining and shifting their attention and in registering,
organizing, and using information than did the study
participants who had used marijuana no more than 3 of the
previous 30 days. As a result, someone who smokes marijuana
every day may be functioning at a reduced intellectual level
all of the time.
More recently, the same researchers showed that the ability
of a group of long-term heavy marijuana users to recall
words from a list remained impaired for a week after
quitting, but returned to normal within 4 weeks(29).
Thus, it is possible that some cognitive abilities may be
restored in individuals who quit smoking marijuana, even
after long-term heavy use.
Workers who smoke marijuana are more likely than their
coworkers to have problems on the job. Several studies
associate workers’ marijuana smoking with increased
absences, tardiness, accidents, workers’ compensation
claims, and job turnover. A study of municipal workers found
that those who used marijuana on or off the job reported
more “withdrawal behaviors”—such as leaving work without
permission, daydreaming, spending work time on personal
matters, and shirking tasks—that adversely affect
productivity and morale(30). In
another study, marijuana users reported that use of the drug
impaired several important measures of life achievement
including cognitive abilities, career status, social life,
and physical and mental health(31).
.Addictive Potential
Long-term marijuana use can lead to addiction for some
people; that is, they use the drug compulsively even though
it interferes with family, school, work, and recreational
activities. Drug craving and withdrawal symptoms can make it
hard for long-term marijuana smokers to stop using the drug.
People trying to quit report irritability, sleeplessness,
and anxiety(38). They also display
increased aggression on psychological tests, peaking
approximately one week after the last use of the drug(39).
Genetic Vulnerability
Scientists have found that whether an individual has
positive or negative sensations after smoking marijuana can
be influenced by heredity. A 1997 study demonstrated that
identical male twins were more likely than non-identical
male twins to report similar responses to marijuana use,
indicating a genetic basis for their response to the drug(40).
(Identical twins share all of their genes.)
It also was discovered that the twins’ shared or family
environment before age 18 had no detectable influence on
their response to marijuana. Certain environmental factors,
however, such as the availability of marijuana, expectations
about how the drug would affect them, the influence of
friends and social contacts, and other factors that
differentiate experiences of identical twins were found to
have an important effect.
Treating Marijuana Problems
The latest treatment data indicate that, in 2000, marijuana
was the primary drug of abuse in about 15 percent (236,638)
of all admissions to treatment facilities in the United
States. Marijuana admissions were primarily male (76
percent), White (57 percent), and young (46 percent under 20
years old). Those in treatment for primary marijuana use had
begun use at an early age; 56 percent had used it by age 14
and 92 percent had used it by 18(41).
One study of adult marijuana users found comparable benefits
from a 14-session cognitive-behavioral group treatment and a
2-session individual treatment that included motivational
interviewing and advice on ways to reduce marijuana use.
Participants were mostly men in their early thirties who had
smoked marijuana daily for more than 10 years. By increasing
patients’ awareness of what triggers their marijuana use,
both treatments sought to help patients devise avoidance
strategies. Use, dependence symptoms, and psychosocial
problems decreased for at least 1 year following both
treatments; about 30 percent of users were abstinent during
the last 3-month followup period(42).
Another study suggests that giving patients vouchers that
they can redeem for goods—such as movie passes, sporting
equipment, or vocational training—may further improve
outcomes(43).
Although no medications are currently available for treating
marijuana abuse, recent discoveries about the workings of
the THC receptors have raised the possibility of eventually
developing a medication that will block the intoxicating
effects of THC. Such a medication might be used to prevent
relapse to marijuana abuse by lessening or eliminating its
appeal.
Source:
http://www.nida.nih.gov/Infofax/marijuana.html |
|

2. Myth of Medical Marijuana
Q: Does marijuana pose health risks to
users?
- Marijuana is an addictive drug with significant health
consequences to its users and others. Many harmful short-term and
long-term problems have been documented with its use:
- The short term effects of marijuana use include: memory loss,
distorted perception, trouble with thinking and problem solving,
loss of motor skills, decrease in muscle strength, increased heart
rate, and anxiety.
- In recent years there has been a dramatic increase in the number
of emergency room mentions of marijuana use. From 1993-2000, the
number of emergency room marijuana mentions more than tripled.
- There are also many long-term health consequences of marijuana
use. According to the National Institutes of Health, studies show
that someone who smokes five joints per week may be taking in as
many cancer-causing chemicals as someone who smokes a full pack of
cigarettes every day.
- Marijuana contains more than 400 chemicals, including most of
the harmful substances found in tobacco smoke. Smoking one marijuana
cigarette deposits about four times more tar into the lungs than a
filtered tobacco cigarette.
- Harvard University researchers report that the risk of a heart
attack is five times higher than usual in the hour after smoking
marijuana.
- Smoking marijuana also weakens the immune system and raises the
risk of lung infections. A Columbia University study found that a
control group smoking a single marijuana cigarette every other day
for a year had a white-blood-cell count that was 39 percent lower
than normal, thus damaging the immune system and making the user far
more susceptible to infection and sickness.
Users can become dependent on marijuana to the point they must seek
treatment to stop abusing it. In 1999, more than 200,000 Americans
entered substance abuse treatment primarily for marijuana abuse and
dependence.
More teens are in treatment for marijuana use than for any other
drug or for alcohol. Adolescent admissions to substance abuse
facilities for marijuana grew from 43 percent of all adolescent
admissions in 1994 to 60 percent in 1999.
- Marijuana is much stronger now than it was decades ago.
According to data from the Potency Monitoring Project at the
University of Mississippi, the tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content of
commercial-grade marijuana rose from an average of 3.71 percent in
1985 to an average of 5.57 percent in 1998. The average THC content
of U.S. produced sinsemilla increased from 3.2 percent in 1977 to
12.8 percent in 1997.
Q. Does marijuana have any medical value?
- Any determination of a drug's valid medical use must be based on
the best available science undertaken by medical professionals. The
Institute of Medicine conducted a comprehensive study in 1999 to
assess the potential health benefits of marijuana and its
constituent cannabinoids. The study concluded that smoking marijuana
is not recommended for the treatment of any disease
condition. In addition, there are more effective medications
currently available. For those reasons, the Institute of Medicine
concluded that there is little future in smoked marijuana as a
medically approved medication.
- Advocates have promoted the use of marijuana to treat medical
conditions such as glaucoma. However, this is a good example of more
effective medicines already available. According to the Institute of
Medicine, there are six classes of drugs and multiple surgical
techniques that are available to treat glaucoma that effectively
slow the progression of this disease by reducing high intraocular
pressure.
In other studies, smoked marijuana has been shown to cause a variety
of health problems, including cancer, respiratory problems,
increased heart rate, loss of motor skills, and increased heart
rate. Furthermore, marijuana can affect the immune system by
impairing the ability of T-cells to fight off infections,
demonstrating that marijuana can do more harm than good in people
with already compromised immune systems.
- In addition, in a recent study by the Mayo Clinic, THC was shown
to be less effective than standard treatments in helping cancer
patients regain lost appetites.0
The American Medical Association recommends that marijuana remain a
Schedule I controlled substance.
The DEA supports research into the safety and efficacy of THC (the
major psychoactive component of marijuana), and such studies are
ongoing, supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug
Abuse.
As a result of such research, a synthetic THC drug, Marinol, has
been available to the public since 1985. The Food and Drug
Administration has determined that Marinol is safe, effective, and
has therapeutic benefits for use as a treatment for nausea and
vomiting associated with cancer chemotherapy, and as a treatment of
weight loss in patients with AIDS. However, it does not produce the
harmful health effects associated with smoking marijuana.
- Furthermore, the DEA recently approved the University of
California San Diego to undertake rigorous scientific studies to
assess the safety and efficacy of cannabis compounds for treating
certain debilitating medical conditions.
It's also important to realize that the campaign to allow marijuana
to be used as medicine is a tactical maneuver in an overall strategy
to completely legalize all drugs. Pro-legalization groups have
transformed the debate from decriminalizing drug use to one of
compassion and care for people with serious diseases. The New York
Times interviewed Ethan Nadelman, Director of the Lindesmith Center,
in January 2000. Responding to criticism from former Drug Czar Barry
McCaffrey that the medical marijuana issue is a stalking-horse for
drug legalization, Mr. Nadelman did not contradict General
McCaffrey. "Will it help lead toward marijuana legaization?" Mr.
Nadelman said: "I hope so."
Q. Does marijuana harm anyone besides the individual who smokes
it?
- Consider the public safety of others when confronted with
intoxicated drug users:
Marijuana affects many skills required for safe driving: alertness,
the ability to concentrate, coordination, and reaction time. These
effects can last up to 24 hours after smoking marijuana. Marijuana
use can make it difficult to judge distances and react to signals
and signs on the road.
- In a 1990 report, the National Transportation Safety Board
studied 182 fatal truck accidents. It found that just as many of the
accidents were caused by drivers using marijuana as were caused by
alcohol -- 12.5 percent in each case.
- Consider also that drug use, including marijuana, contributes to
crime. A large percentage of those arrested for crimes test positive
for marijuana. Nationwide, 40 percent of adult males tested positive
for marijuana at the time of their arrest.
Q. Is marijuana a gateway drug?
- Yes. Among marijuana's most harmful consequences is its role in
leading to the use of other illegal drugs like heroin and cocaine.
Long-term studies of students who use drugs show that very few young
people use other illegal drugs without first trying marijuana. While
not all people who use marijuana go on to use other drugs, using
marijuana sometimes lowers inhibitions about drug use and exposes
users to a culture that encourages use of other drugs.
- The risk of using cocaine has been estimated to be more than 104
times greater for those who have tried marijuana than for those who
have never tried it.
In Summary:
- Marijuana is a dangerous, addictive drug that poses significant
health threats to users.
- Marijuana has no medical value that can't be met more
effectively by legal drugs.
- Marijuana users are far more likely to use other drugs like
cocaine and heroin than non-marijuana users.
- Drug legalizers use "medical marijuana" as red herring in effort
to advocate broader legalization of drug use.
Source:
http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/ongoing/marijuana.html |

3: Marijuana Use

4. Research on Marijuana
What are the acute effects of marijuana use?
Marijuana's effects
begin immediately after the drug enters the brain and last
from 1 to 3 hours. If marijuana is consumed in food or
drink, the short-term effects begin more slowly, usually in
1/2 to 1 hour, and last longer, for as long as 4 hours.
Smoking marijuana deposits several times more THC into the
blood than does eating or drinking the drug.
Within a few minutes after inhaling marijuana smoke, an
individual's heart begins beating more rapidly, the
bronchial passages relax and become enlarged, and blood
vessels in the eyes expand, making the eyes look red. The
heart rate, normally 70 to 80 beats per minute, may increase
by 20 to 50 beats per minute or, in some cases, even double.
This effect can be greater if other drugs are taken with
marijuana.
As THC enters the brain, it causes a user to feel
euphoric - or "high" - by acting in the brain's reward
system, areas of the brain that respond to stimuli such as
food and drink as well as most drugs of abuse. THC activates
the reward system in the same way that nearly all drugs of
abuse do, by stimulating brain cells to release the chemical
dopamine.
A marijuana user may experience pleasant sensations,
colors and sounds may seem more intense, and time appears to
pass very slowly. The user's mouth feels dry, and he or she
may suddenly become very hungry and thirsty. His or her
hands may tremble and grow cold. The euphoria passes after
awhile, and then the user may feel sleepy or depressed.
Occasionally, marijuana use produces anxiety, fear,
distrust, or panic.
Marijuana use impairs a person's ability to form
memories, recall events (see Marijuana, Memory, and the
Hippocampus), and shift attention from one thing to another.
THC also disrupts coordination and balance by binding to
receptors in the cerebellum and basal ganglia, parts of the
brain that regulate balance, posture, coordination of
movement, and reaction time. Through its effects on the
brain and body, marijuana intoxication can cause accidents.
Studies show that approximately 6 to 11 percent of fatal
accident victims test positive for THC. In many of these
cases, alcohol is detected as well.
In a study conducted by the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, a moderate dose of marijuana alone
was shown to impair driving performance; however, the
effects of even a low dose of marijuana combined with
alcohol were markedly greater than for either drug alone.
Driving indices measured included reaction time, visual
search frequency (driver checking side streets), and the
ability to perceive and/or respond to changes in the
relative velocity of other vehicles.
Marijuana users who have taken high doses of the drug may
experience acute toxic psychosis, which includes
hallucinations, delusions, and depersonalization - a loss of
the sense of personal identity, or self-recognition.
Although the specific causes of these symptoms remain
unknown, they appear to occur more frequently when a high
dose of cannabis is consumed in food or drink rather than
smoked. |
|
Source:
http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Marijuana/Marijuana3.html#physicalhealth
Glossary
Addiction: A chronic, relapsing disease characterized
by compulsive drug-seeking and abuse and by long-lasting
chemical changes in the brain.
Cannabinoids: Chemicals that help control mental and
physical processes when produced naturally by the body and that
produce intoxication and other effects when absorbed from
marijuana.
Carcinogen: Any substance that causes cancer.
Dopamine: A brain chemical, classified as a
neurotransmitter, found in regions of the brain that regulate
movement, emotion, motivation, and pleasure.
Hippocampus: An area of the brain crucial for learning
and memory.
Hydrocarbon: Any chemical compound containing only
hydrogen and carbon.
Psychoactive: Having a specific effect on the mind.
THC: Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol; the main active
ingredient in marijuana, which acts on the brain to produce its
effects.
Withdrawal: Symptoms that occur after use of a drug is
reduced or stopped.
Source:
http://www.drugabuse.gov/ResearchReports/Marijuana/Marijuana6.html#glossary
|
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Other
Resources
Marijuana Fact Sheet
An overview of information on medical marijuana, marijuana
trafficking, seizures, price and purity.
Marijuana Fact Sheet
This fact sheet provides information on marijuana use, health
effects, availability, and related enforcement and treatment
activities.
Marijuana-Info.Org
This page lists useful resources regarding marijuana use, its
effects and treatment.
Marijuana Photos
This site provides photos of marijuana, hashish, and indoor
growing operations.
Marijuana Prevention Initiative
To dispel myths and misconceptions about the drug, ONDCP has
launched a comprehensive marijuana prevention initiative.
Marijuana Publications
A listing of publications related to marijuana from various
sources.
Misinformation Clouds Medical Marijuana Issue
This Op-Ed by Dr. Andrea Barthwell, ONDCP Deputy Director of
Demand Reduction, discusses the current issues surrounding the
use of marijuana for medical purposes.
What Americans Need to Know About Marijuana
This document provides important facts about our nation’s most
misunderstood illegal drug.
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