PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

RI Hospital physician: Legalizing medical marijuana doesn't increase use among adolescents

Study reviewed data of self-reported marijuana use in high school students

2014-04-23
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Parents and physicians concerned about an increase in adolescents' marijuana use following the legalization of medical marijuana can breathe a sigh of relief. According to a new study at Rhode Island Hospital which compared 20 years worth of data from states with and without medical marijuana laws, legalizing the drug did not lead to increased use among adolescents. The study is published online in advance of print in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

"Any time a state considers legalizing medical marijuana, there are concerns from the public about an increase in drug use among teens," said principal investigator Esther Choo, M.D., an attending physician in the department of emergency medicine at Rhode Island Hospital. "In this study, we examined 20 years worth of data, comparing trends in self-reported adolescent marijuana use between states with medical marijuana laws and neighboring states without the laws, and found no increase in marijuana use that could be attributed to the law."

Choo continued, "This adds to a growing body of literature published over the past three years that is remarkably consistent in demonstrating that state medical marijuana policies do not have a downstream effect on adolescent drug use, as we feared they might."

Currently, medical marijuana is legal in 21 states and the District of Columbia.

The study examined a nationally representative sample of high school students. The data showed that past-month marijuana use was common, at nearly 21 percent of the study population. However, there were no statistically significant differences in marijuana use before and after policy changes in any state pairing.

"Researchers should continue to monitor and measure marijuana use," Choo said. "But we hope that this information will provide some level of reassurance to policymakers, physicians, and parents about medical marijuana laws."

Choo's principal affiliation is Rhode Island Hospital, and she also holds an academic appointment as an assistant professor of emergency medicine at The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

INFORMATION:About Rhode Island Hospital Founded in 1863, Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, R.I., is a private, not-for-profit hospital and is the principal teaching hospital of The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. A major trauma center for southeastern New England, the hospital is dedicated to being on the cutting edge of medicine and research. Last year, Rhode Island Hospital received more than $55 million in external research funding. It is also home to Hasbro Children's Hospital, the state's only facility dedicated to pediatric care. For more information on Rhode Island Hospital, visit http://www.rhodeislandhospital.org, follow us on Twitter @RIHospital or like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/rhodeislandhospitalpage.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

In lab tests, the antimicrobial ingredient triclosan spurs growth of breast cancer cells

2014-04-23
Some manufacturers are turning away from using triclosan as an antimicrobial ingredient in soaps, toothpastes and other products over health concerns. And now scientists are reporting new evidence that appears to support these worries. Their study, published in the ACS journal Chemical Research in Toxicology, found that triclosan, as well as another commercial substance called octylphenol, promoted the growth of human breast cancer cells in lab dishes and breast cancer tumors in mice. Kyung-Chul Choi and colleagues note that hormonal imbalances seem to play a role in ...

Male-biased tweeting

2014-04-23
This news release is available in German. It all started out with a comic strip in 1985. A cartoon character explained to her female companion which three requirements a movie had to fulfil for her to want to watch it: (one) it has to have at least two women in it (two) who talk to each other about (three) something besides a man. Born was the Bechdel test, named after American cartoonist Alison Bechdel. The test reveals whether a movie features a minimum of female independence. A lot of Hollywood movies fail the Bechdel test miserably. That movies like "Star Wars" ...

Female intuition could be linked to lower exposure to testosterone in women while in womb

Female intuition could be linked to lower exposure to testosterone in women while in womb
2014-04-23
This news release is available in Spanish. So-called "female intuition" could actually have a biological component, related to the lower prenatal exposure to testosterone women receive in the womb. This would lead them to have a "more intuitive and less reflective" attitude to life than men. These are the results of a study carried out by Spanish researchers from the University of Granada, the Barcelona Pompeu Fabra University and the Middlesex University of London, in an article recently published in the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology. According to previous ...

Steering chemical reactions with laser pulses

Steering chemical reactions with laser pulses
2014-04-23
Usually, chemical reactions just take their course, much like a ball rolling downhill. However, it is also possible to deliberately control chemical reactions: at the Vienna University of Technology, molecules are hit with femtosecond laser pulses, changing the distribution of electrons in the molecule. This interaction is so short that at first it does not have any discernable influence on the atomic nuclei, which have much more mass than the electrons. However, the disturbance of the electron distribution can still initiate chemical processes and eventually separate ...

Uniting community development efforts could benefit members of underserved communities

2014-04-23
COLUMBIA, Mo. –Research shows that wealth inequality creates barriers to community development, due to the widespread effects of poverty. A report by the United Nations Children's Fund shows that more than one in five children in the United States falls below the poverty line. Although many organizations address poverty, they often serve similar demographics and may compete for clients and resources. Recently, University of Missouri researchers studied Cooperative Extension's efforts to link community development organizations and concluded Extension is the hub that can ...

Remote surveillance may increase chance of survival for 'uncontacted' Brazilian tribes

Remote surveillance may increase chance of survival for uncontacted Brazilian tribes
2014-04-23
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Lowland South America, including the Amazon Basin, harbors most of the last indigenous societies that have limited contact with the outside world. Studying these tribes, located deep within Amazonian rainforests, gives scientists a glimpse at what tribal cultures may have been like before the arrival of Europeans. Now, researchers at the University of Missouri have used satellite images to assess the demographic health of one particular village of isolated people on the border between Brazil and Peru. Remote surveillance is the only method to safely track ...

Impact of whooping cough vaccination revealed

2014-04-23
The most comprehensive study to date of the family of bacteria that causes whooping cough points to more effective vaccine strategies and reveals surprising findings about the bacteria's origin and evolution. The new results could alter public health strategies to control this respiratory disease, which kills 195,000 children worldwide each year. Genomic analysis of 343 strains of the Bordetella pertussis bacteria from around the world collected over the last 100 years illustrates how vaccination has shaped its evolution. Since its introduction across the globe between ...

Loss of memory in Alzheimer's mice models reversed through gene therapy

Loss of memory in Alzheimers mice models reversed through gene therapy
2014-04-23
Alzheimer's disease is the first cause of dementia and affects some 400,000 people in Spain alone. However, no effective cure has yet been found. One of the reasons for this is the lack of knowledge on the cellular mechanisms which cause alterations in nerve transmissions and the loss of memory in the initial stages of the disease. Researchers from the Institute of Neuroscience at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona have discovered the cellular mechanism involved in memory consolidation and were able to develop a gene therapy which reverses the loss of memory in mice ...

Liquid spacetime

2014-04-23
What if spacetime were a kind of fluid? This is the question tackled by theoretical physicists working on quantum gravity by creating models attempting to reconcile gravity and quantum mechanics. Some of these models predict that spacetime at the Planck scale (10-33cm) is no longer continuous – as held by classical physics – but discrete in nature. Just like the solids or fluids we come into contact with every day, which can be seen as made up of atoms and molecules when observed at sufficient resolution. A structure of this kind generally implies, at very high energies, ...

How Australia got the hump with 1 million feral camels

How Australia got the hump with 1 million feral camels
2014-04-23
A new study by a University of Exeter researcher has shed light on how an estimated one million-strong population of wild camels thriving in Australia's remote outback have become reviled as pests and culled on a large scale. Sarah Crowley, of the Environment and Sustainability Institute at the University of Exeter's Penryn Campus, explored the history of the camel in Australia, from their historic role helping to create the country's infrastructure through to their current status as unwelcome "invader." The deserts of the Australian outback are a notoriously inhospitable ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Findings of large-scale study on 572 Asian families supports gene-directed management of BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene carriers in Singapore

Many children with symptoms of brain injuries and concussions are missing out on vital checks, national US study finds

Genetic hope in fight against devastating wheat disease

Mutualism, from biology to organic chemistry?

POSTECH Professor Yong-Young Noh resolves two decades of oxide semiconductor challenges, which Is published in prestigious journal Nature

Could fishponds help with Hawaiʻi’s food sustainability?

International network in Asia and Europe to uncover the mysteries of marine life

Anthropologist documents how women and shepherds historically reduced wildfire risk in Central Italy

Living at higher altitudes in India linked to increased risk of childhood stunting

Scientists discover a new signaling pathway and design a novel drug for liver fibrosis

High-precision blood glucose level prediction achieved by few-molecule reservoir computing

The importance of communicating to the public during a pandemic, and the personal risk it can lead to

Improving health communication to save lives during epidemics

Antimicrobial-resistant hospital infections remain at least 12% above pre-pandemic levels, major US study finds

German study finds antibiotic use in patients hospitalised with COVID-19 appears to have no beneficial effect on clinical outcomes

Targeting specific protein regions offers a new treatment approach in medulloblastoma

$2.7 million grant to explore hypoxia’s impact on blood stem cells

Cardiovascular societies propel plans forward for a new American Board of Cardiovascular Medicine

Hebrew SeniorLife selected for nationwide collaborative to accelerate system-wide spread of age-friendly care for older adults

New tool helps identify babies at high-risk for RSV

Reno/Sparks selected to be part of Urban Heat Mapping Campaign

Advance in the treatment of acute heart failure identified

AGS honors Dr. Rainier P. Soriano with Dennis W. Jahnigen Memorial Award at #AGS24 for proven excellence in geriatrics education

New offshore wind turbines can take away energy from existing ones

Unprecedented research probes the relationship between sleep and memory in napping babies and young children

Job losses help explain increase in drug deaths among Black Americans

Nationwide, 32 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants for physical activity

Exposure to noise – even while in the egg – impairs bird development and fitness

Vitamin D availability enhances antitumor microbes in mice

Conservation actions have improved the state of biodiversity worldwide

[Press-News.org] RI Hospital physician: Legalizing medical marijuana doesn't increase use among adolescents
Study reviewed data of self-reported marijuana use in high school students