Heavy Teen Marijuana Use

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indicabush

indicabush

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Heavy teen marijuana use may cut life short by 60


Heavy marijuana use in the late teen years puts men at a higher risk for death by age 60, a new long-term study suggests.

Swedish researchers analyzed the records of more than 45,000 men beginning in 1969 and 1970. The scientists from the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm reported that 4,000 died during the 42-year follow-up period, and men who'd used marijuana heavily at ages 18 and 19 were 40 percent more likely to die by age 60 compared to guys who hadn't used the drug.

The authors of the new study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, said the findings contradict previous research involving the same group of men.

But this study was longer and participants might have reached an age where the long-term effects of cannabis were taking a toll on health, said addiction expert Scott Krakower, an assistant unit chief of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital, in New Hyde Park, NY.

"Cannabis users have poorer health in general. You'd expect there to be increased mortality risk," Krakower told CBS News. He pointed to another long-term study linking early heavy marijuana use with lung cancer, and a second study that associates the drug with increased heart problems.

"Marijuana users generally may have poorer diets and they might be tobacco smokers. There's an increased linkage between weed and tobacco," said Krakower.

Dr. Kevin Hill, a member of the American Psychiatric Association's Council on Addiction Psychiatry, told CBS News, "One of the key messages from a study like this comes down to two words: dose matters."

The study looked at teenagers who had used marijuana more than 50 times.

Hill, an assistant professor of psychiatry at McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School, said most people who use marijuana don't use it at heavy levels. "Nine percent of adults use it at that level and develop an addiction."

He said the study is limited because it didn't provide specifics about heavy use and continued use.

Using marijuana earlier in life is linked to poorer psychological health, he said, and that can contribute to more health problems down the road.

"It is well-established that if you begin using at an early age and use a lot then, there are significant negative outcomes particularly in terms of mental health and it wouldn't be a surprise for that to translate to long-term health problems," Hill said.

Earlier cannabis use is linked to cognitive problems. Hills said, "One 2012 study showed early, regular use of marijuana - the kind of level they describe in this study -- led to an eight point decline in IQ over time."

He said it's also associated with worse anxiety and depression, adding, "If you start using marijuana at an early age, you're more likely to express a psychotic disorder."

In this day and age of continued debate over marijuana policy issues, Hill said, "This kind of study is incredibly important. We don't have definitive answers, but it underscores if you are using heavily, you're probably going to have some negative consequences."

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" The authors of the new study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry". Yes, yes we can help you just take theses little magic pills and remain depended on "us"!!!

So, I'm turning 67 this year and I have been enjoying cannabis since 1961. The bottom paragraph I believe was most enlightening to me..... "but it underscores if you are using heavily, you're probably going to have some negative consequences." Well, maybe like you I'm still waiting :smoking::smoking::smoking:.

Damn it!!! Cannabis made me a successful person!
 
Seamaiden

Seamaiden

Living dead girl
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I'm 52, and I'm still waiting. I won't call myself the most successful person around, but I'm relatively happy and relatively healthy. Does cannabis cause kidney stones? Not according to my urologist.

Right now I take issue with American psychiatrists. And umbrage.
 
Midwestjay

Midwestjay

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I call bs on most of it. Too many variable. Only thing I agree with is anxiety and depression part. But beyond that.... Nah
 
xavier7995

xavier7995

1,806
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I can buy into the idea that inhaling smoke from burnt plant matter all day everyday isn't the best idea health wise. I would also say, the fine folks using drugs heavily at an early age probably will carry on with lots of risky behavior during the course of their life and thus statistically die younger. Meh, would rather live how I like and die early than live forever and be miserable. Still counting on science to make me a cyborg in 50 years, ftw.
 
Black Lab

Black Lab

286
93
It's a European study. They smoke their hash and weed with tobacco over there!! At least they did when I lived in Germany for a few years back awhile. No wonder they die young. Also, it's news to me that cannabis smokers have poorer health in general. I call bullshit on that. I'm over 60 and in excellent health, thank you. Smoked weed since 15 years old. I've always thought cannabis users are healthier than non users. I've got cannininoid receptors all through my nervous system that need cannininoid
This looks like another poorly designed and biased study with no validity or control. Weed bad, mmkay ✌️
 
ShroomKing

ShroomKing

Best of luck. Peace
3,127
263
Heavy teen marijuana use may cut life short by 60


Heavy marijuana use in the late teen years puts men at a higher risk for death by age 60, a new long-term study suggests.

Swedish researchers analyzed the records of more than 45,000 men beginning in 1969 and 1970. The scientists from the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm reported that 4,000 died during the 42-year follow-up period, and men who'd used marijuana heavily at ages 18 and 19 were 40 percent more likely to die by age 60 compared to guys who hadn't used the drug.

The authors of the new study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, said the findings contradict previous research involving the same group of men.

But this study was longer and participants might have reached an age where the long-term effects of cannabis were taking a toll on health, said addiction expert Scott Krakower, an assistant unit chief of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital, in New Hyde Park, NY.

"Cannabis users have poorer health in general. You'd expect there to be increased mortality risk," Krakower told CBS News. He pointed to another long-term study linking early heavy marijuana use with lung cancer, and a second study that associates the drug with increased heart problems.

"Marijuana users generally may have poorer diets and they might be tobacco smokers. There's an increased linkage between weed and tobacco," said Krakower.

Dr. Kevin Hill, a member of the American Psychiatric Association's Council on Addiction Psychiatry, told CBS News, "One of the key messages from a study like this comes down to two words: dose matters."

The study looked at teenagers who had used marijuana more than 50 times.

Hill, an assistant professor of psychiatry at McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School, said most people who use marijuana don't use it at heavy levels. "Nine percent of adults use it at that level and develop an addiction."

He said the study is limited because it didn't provide specifics about heavy use and continued use.

Using marijuana earlier in life is linked to poorer psychological health, he said, and that can contribute to more health problems down the road.

"It is well-established that if you begin using at an early age and use a lot then, there are significant negative outcomes particularly in terms of mental health and it wouldn't be a surprise for that to translate to long-term health problems," Hill said.

Earlier cannabis use is linked to cognitive problems. Hills said, "One 2012 study showed early, regular use of marijuana - the kind of level they describe in this study -- led to an eight point decline in IQ over time."

He said it's also associated with worse anxiety and depression, adding, "If you start using marijuana at an early age, you're more likely to express a psychotic disorder."

In this day and age of continued debate over marijuana policy issues, Hill said, "This kind of study is incredibly important. We don't have definitive answers, but it underscores if you are using heavily, you're probably going to have some negative consequences."

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

" The authors of the new study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry". Yes, yes we can help you just take theses little magic pills and remain depended on "us"!!!

So, I'm turning 67 this year and I have been enjoying cannabis since 1961. The bottom paragraph I believe was most enlightening to me..... "but it underscores if you are using heavily, you're probably going to have some negative consequences." Well, maybe like you I'm still waiting :smoking::smoking::smoking:.

Damn it!!! Cannabis made me a successful person!

Gotta love it when they use science.
But the truth is this....
.............40% of any group studied will die around age 60. This isn't marijuana related. This is life.
 
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