News (Media Awareness Project) - US TX: LTE: Pot-Smoking Especially Harmful To Teens |
Title: | US TX: LTE: Pot-Smoking Especially Harmful To Teens |
Published On: | 2003-04-27 |
Source: | Amarillo Globe-News (TX) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-20 18:31:31 |
POT-SMOKING ESPECIALLY HARMFUL TO TEENS
Regarding Greg Sagan's April 22 column, I have no interest in debating him
about Terry McEachern's legal problems or the laws that govern the abuse of
legal and illegal drugs.
However, I am in sharp disagreement with the suggestion that "smoking a
joint in the privacy of one's home should not be considered 'drug abuse'
any more than having a glass of wine with dinner."
This statement certainly does not hold true for teen-agers in their
formative years. Most teen-agers experiment with alcohol, but very few
become alcoholics or are involved in serious or fatal accidents. In
contrast, smoking even one or two joints of marijuana daily over a period
of several years has devastating long-term effects on young people.
Regular use of this drug arrests emotional development at a time when the
young person needs to be excelling in school, making career choices, and
developing interpersonal skills. Too often, the daily use of marijuana
turns a personable, ambitious teen-ager into a depressed, rebellious,
uncommunicative underachiever.
A 19-year-old surgical patient of mine in Albuquerque stated it succinctly:
"I started smoking a joint a day when I was 14 and finally quit last year.
Now I realize that I have the emotional maturity of a 14-year-old, and I'm
scared to death!"
Gordon W. Scott, M.D.
Regarding Greg Sagan's April 22 column, I have no interest in debating him
about Terry McEachern's legal problems or the laws that govern the abuse of
legal and illegal drugs.
However, I am in sharp disagreement with the suggestion that "smoking a
joint in the privacy of one's home should not be considered 'drug abuse'
any more than having a glass of wine with dinner."
This statement certainly does not hold true for teen-agers in their
formative years. Most teen-agers experiment with alcohol, but very few
become alcoholics or are involved in serious or fatal accidents. In
contrast, smoking even one or two joints of marijuana daily over a period
of several years has devastating long-term effects on young people.
Regular use of this drug arrests emotional development at a time when the
young person needs to be excelling in school, making career choices, and
developing interpersonal skills. Too often, the daily use of marijuana
turns a personable, ambitious teen-ager into a depressed, rebellious,
uncommunicative underachiever.
A 19-year-old surgical patient of mine in Albuquerque stated it succinctly:
"I started smoking a joint a day when I was 14 and finally quit last year.
Now I realize that I have the emotional maturity of a 14-year-old, and I'm
scared to death!"
Gordon W. Scott, M.D.
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