Pubdate: Wed, 10 Sep 2014 Source: Tampa Tribune (FL) Copyright: 2014 The Tribune Co. Contact: http://tbo.com/list/news-opinion-letters/submit/ Website: http://tbo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/446 Author: Gregory Gerdeman Page: 12A Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v14/n738/a06.html POT AND AMENDMENT 2 In his excellent story "Teens at center of pot debate" (Metro, Sept. 7), Jerome Stockfisch inadvertently misquoted me as critiquing a study by Dr. Michael Smith of Northwestern University. That study, published in the journal Schizophrenia Bulletin last year, found that compared to a non-cannabis using control group, young subjects who had used pot very heavily as teenagers (in fact, diagnosed with a cannabis use disorder) appeared to have structural changes in certain regions of their brains. They also had difficulty with a test of short-term working memory. I take no exception to this interesting study. If very heavy, daily marijuana use was responsible for the abnormal brain changes and memory impairment observed, it should be taken seriously as a risk for teenage cannabis abusers. But as the authors recognize, this causality remains uncertain. It is entirely possible that the neuro-anatomical variations were preexisting, and merely predict a population of teenagers who for some reason are more vulnerable to develop an excessive pot habit. Still, it's useful information. However, members of the same research team (but not including the quoted Dr. Smith) also published a paper in April in The Journal of Neuroscience, which claims to reveal brain abnormalities in young adult users who are otherwise quite functional. The story was covered widely by the media as revealing a lurking threat of "recreational" cannabis use. I am one of many scientists who have criticized the work as seriously flawed and gratuitously hyped. When talking with Stockfisch for his story, it was this study that I judged as "very poorly done," not the earlier work he reports on. It was an honest miscommunication. Regarding Amendment 2 in Florida, it really doesn't matter. This vote is not about full legalization. I have the privilege to serve on a nonpartisan group called Florida for Care, working to craft a comprehensive proposal for regulating medical marijuana under Amendment 2. The group is composed of an impressive set of Floridians, including business leaders, legal experts, law enforcement, physicians and patient advocates. It is a serious group with a wealth of perspectives, and I am proud to be part of it. Heavy marijuana use does carry risks for young people, but overdue medicalization is not part of that problem. If Amendment 2 passes, medical cannabis will be grown and distributed under carefully controlled conA-ditions, with a patient registry similar to what shut down the painkiller pill mills. There is no reason to think that our experience will be different from other medical marijuana states, where the data are clear: Illicit youth use has not increased as a result of legalizing patient access. Gregory Gerdman, Ph.D., Eckerd College - --- MAP posted-by: Matt