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

Adolescents in substance abuse programs report using other's med marijuana

2012-08-09
(Press-News.org) AURORA, Colo. – (Aug. 8. 2012) - A recent study by University of Colorado School of Medicine researchers shows that it is very common for adolescents in substance abuse treatment to use medical marijuana recommended to someone else (also known as "diverted" medical marijuana).

Stacy Salomonsen-Sautel, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the CU School of Medicine's Department of Pharmacology and her colleagues in the Department of Psychiatry looked at two adolescent substance abuse treatment programs in the Denver metropolitan area. The study participants were asked questions about their medical marijuana use. Out of 164 adolescents in the study, 121 or 73.8 percent reported using medical marijuana that had been recommended for someone else and they reported using medical marijuana a median of 50 times.

The study shows adolescent patients who used medical marijuana began using marijuana on a regular basis at a younger age compared with adolescent patients who did not use medical marijuana. The study also shows that adolescents who used medical marijuana had more marijuana abuse/dependence and conduct disorder symptoms than adolescents who did not use medical marijuana. Additionally, most of the adolescent patients rated smoking marijuana as having slight or no risk of harm to themselves.

Lead author Salomonsen-Sautel said "Many high-risk adolescent patients in substance abuse treatment have used diverted medical marijuana on multiple occasions, which implies that substantial diversion is occurring from registered users. Our results support the need for policy changes that protect against diversion of medical marijuana to adolescents."

Recent state and federal policy changes have allowed for more widespread legalized medical marijuana use in Colorado. At the time of the study, only 41 adolescents in the state held valid registry identification cards for medical marijuana. This suggests adolescents using medical marijuana are more likely to get it from adult registered users than from peers.

The study also calls into question the adequacy of the safeguards meant to prevent medical marijuana use by individuals to whom it was not recommended, adolescents in particular. As the study authors note, medical marijuana in Colorado is not handled like other medications approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Once approved for medical marijuana usage, individuals can purchase different amounts or even grow a personal supply.

INFORMATION:

The article "Medical Marijuana Use Among Adolescents in Substance Abuse Treatment" by Stacy Salomonsen-Sautel, Joseph T. Sakai, Christian Thurstone, Robin Corley, Christian Hopfer, appears in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Volume 51, Issue 7 (July 2012), published by Elsevier.

This study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (DA-011015) with additional support provided by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

Faculty at the University of Colorado School of Medicine work to advance science and improve care. These faculty members include physicians, educators and scientists at University of Colorado Hospital, Children's Hospital Colorado, Denver Health, National Jewish Health, and the Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Degrees offered by the CU Denver School of Medicine include doctor of medicine, doctor of physical therapy, and masters of physician assistant studies. The School is located on the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical Campus, one of four campuses in the University of Colorado system. For additional news and information, please visit our online newsroom.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Oh, my stars and hexagons! DNA code shapes gold nanoparticles

Oh, my stars and hexagons! DNA code shapes gold nanoparticles
2012-08-09
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — DNA holds the genetic code for all sorts of biological molecules and traits. But University of Illinois researchers have found that DNA's code can similarly shape metallic structures. The team found that DNA segments can direct the shape of gold nanoparticles – tiny gold crystals that have many applications in medicine, electronics and catalysis. Led by Yi Lu, the Schenck Professor of Chemistry at the U. of I., the team published its surprising findings in the journal Angewandte Chemie. "DNA-encoded nanoparticle synthesis can provide us a facile but ...

Student performance improves when teachers given incentives upfront

2012-08-09
A bonus payment to teachers can improve student academic performance — but only when it is given upfront, on the condition that part of the money must be returned if student performance fails to improve, research at the University of Chicago shows. The study showed that students gained as much as a 10 percentile increase in their scores compared to students with similar backgrounds — if their teacher received a bonus at the beginning of the year, with conditions attached. There was no gain for students when teachers were offered the bonus at the end of the school year, ...

NASA's Aqua satellite sees Tropical Storm Haikui make landfall in China

2012-08-09
Typhoon Haikui weakened to a tropical storm just before landfall in China. Eight hours after landfall, NASA's Aqua satellite still showed a strong and organized tropical storm moving inland. China's National Meteorological Center (NMC) said that Tropical Storm Haikui, made landfall in Zhejiang province on August 8 at 3:20 a.m. local time (19:20 UTC or 3:20 p.m. EDT/U.S., August 7), about 140 miles (225 km) south of Shanghai. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center's last official warning on Haikui was issued on August 8 at 0300 UTC (11 a.m. local time/Shanghai). At that time ...

NASA sees heavy rainfall and high thunderstorms in Tropical Storm Ernesto

NASA sees heavy rainfall and high thunderstorms in Tropical Storm Ernesto
2012-08-09
NASA's TRMM satellite has been measuring the heavy rainfall in Ernesto, and some of the rainfall totals may reach one foot in Central America. NASA's Aqua satellite spotted a large area of the strong thunderstorms generating that heavy rainfall, wrapped around the storm's center. Ernesto made landfall in the Yucatan and is currently tracking west over land. At 11:15 p.m. EDT on Tuesday, August 7, Belize radar indicated Ernesto made landfall along the southern Yucatan coast near Mahahual, Mexico as a category one hurricane with maximum sustained winds near 85 mph (140 ...

UF researchers discover earliest use of Mexican turkeys by ancient Maya

2012-08-09
GAINESVILLE, Fla. --- A new University of Florida study shows the turkey, one of the most widely consumed birds worldwide, was domesticated more than 1,000 years earlier than previously believed. Researchers say discovery of the bones from an ancient Mayan archaeological site in Guatemala provides evidence of domestication, usually a significant mark of civilization, and the earliest evidence of the Mexican turkey in the Maya world. The study appears online in PLoS ONE today. The discovery of the turkey bones is significant because the Maya did not use a lot of domesticated ...

How geckos cope with wet feet

2012-08-09
Geckos are remarkable little creatures, clinging to almost any dry surface, and Alyssa Stark, from the University of Akron, USA, explains that they appear to be equally happy scampering through tropical rainforest canopies as they are in urban settings. 'A lot of work is done on geckos that looks at the very small adhesive structures on their toes to really understand how the system works at the most basic level', says Stark. She adds that the animals grip surfaces with microscopic hairs on the soles of their feet that make close enough contact to be attracted to the surface ...

Doctors can now detect hard-to-diagnose prostate cancer

2012-08-09
NEW YORK (August 9, 2012) -- Researchers have successfully developed and tested a new prostate cancer screening method that uses the combined power of a novel drug therapy and changes in PSA levels over time to identify men with a high PSA who are more likely to have aggressive prostate cancer despite negative biopsies. The new study by researchers at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, published in the Journal of Urology, shows that PSA can be a much more effective marker for prostate cancer when an additional drug therapy is used than it can ...

Hormone in fruit flies sheds light on diabetes cure, weight-loss drug for humans

2012-08-09
Winston-Salem, N.C. – Manipulating a group of hormone-producing cells in the brain can control blood sugar levels in the body – a discovery that has dramatic potential for research into weight-loss drugs and diabetes treatment. In a paper published in the October issue of Genetics and available online now, neurobiologists at Wake Forest University examine how fruit flies (Drosophila) react when confronted with a decreased diet. Reduced diet or starvation normally leads to hyperactivity in fruit flies – a hungry fly buzzes around feverishly, looking for more food. That ...

"The Self Publishers Guide to Book Marketing: Step By Step Guide for Fiction and Non-Fiction Authors" by Jamie Cawley

2012-08-09
Jamie Cawley, small business owner and author of over 39 books since 1999, has now set her cap at making self-publishers lives easier with her upcoming work "The Self Publishers Guide to Book Marketing: Step By Step Guide for Fiction and Non-Fiction Authors". "Like many self-published authors I found that promoting my books was far more difficult than actually writing them! After reading a colossal number of books and blogs over the years trying to cobble together a marketing plan I was disappointed to find that most guides were either not focused ...

Young Music Mogul Famous Kid Brick Strikes Again With Video Release "I'm On It" and Simmering New Single "Yes Sir"

2012-08-09
Central Florida native son Famous Kid Brick has got to be one of the brightest rays of independent hip hop to glimmer and gleam from the Sunshine State today. With more than 2,500 BDS-registered radio spins of his runaway hit single "Im On It," 15,000 iTunes downloads and sold out shows throughout the Southeast, Hussch Boy Productions flagship artist Famous Kid Brick has been continually holding Florida captive. And he is set to give the rest of the world a dose of the radiant rays that our backyards have been soaking up for months with the release of his ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Satellite data helps UNM researchers map massive rupture of 2025 Myanmar earthquake

Twisting Spins: Florida State University researchers explore chemical boundaries to create new magnetic material

Mayo Clinic researchers find new hope for toughest myeloma through off-the-shelf immunotherapy

Cell-free DNA Could Detect Adverse Events from Immunotherapy

American College of Cardiology announces Fuster Prevention Forum

AAN issues new guideline for the management of functional seizures

Could GLP-1 drugs affect risk of epilepsy for people with diabetes?

New circoviruses discovered in pilot whales and orcas from the North Atlantic 

Study finds increase in risk of binge drinking among 12th graders who use 2 or more cannabis products

New paper-based technology could transform cancer drug testing

Opioids: clarifying the concept of safe supply to save lives

New species of tiny pumpkin toadlet discovered in Brazil highlights need for conservation in the mountain forests of Serra do Quiriri

Reciprocity matters--people were more supportive of climate policies in their country if they believed other countries were making significant efforts themselves

Stanford Medicine study shows why mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis

Biobanking opens new windows into human evolution

Sky-high smoke

AI tips off scientists to new drug target to fight, treat mpox

USC researchers develop next-generation CAR T cells that show stronger, safer response in animal models

New study reveals Industrial Revolution’s uneven health impacts across England

Vine-inspired robotic gripper gently lifts heavy and fragile objects

Fingerprint of ancient seafarer found on Scandinavia’s oldest plank boat

Lunar soil analyses reveal how space weathering shapes the Moon’s ultraviolet reflectance

Einstein’s theory comes wrapped up with a bow: astronomers spot star “wobbling” around black hole

Danforth Plant Science Center to lead multi-disciplinary research to enhance stress resilience in bioenergy sorghum

Home-delivered groceries improve blood sugar control for people with diabetes facing food insecurity

MIT researchers identified three cognitive skills we use to infer what someone really means

The Iberian Peninsula is rotating clockwise according to new geodynamic data

SwRI, Trinity University to study stable bacterial proteins in search of medical advances

NIH-led study reveals role of mobile DNA elements in lung cancer progression

Stanford Medicine-led study identifies immune switch critical to autoimmunity, cancer

[Press-News.org] Adolescents in substance abuse programs report using other's med marijuana