Articles:

Survey shows boom in marijuana vaping among school kids

Author: By Mike Stobbe, the Associated Press, Seattle Times

Posted on June 23, 2020

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[Reported here as a public service to worried parents.]

Teenager VapingAbout 1 out of 5 high school students in the U.S. say they vaped marijuana in the past year, and its popularity has been booming faster than nicotine vaping, according to a report released Wednesday.

“The speed at which kids are taking up this behavior is very worrisome,” said Dr. Nora Volkow of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the federal agency that pays for the large annual teen survey.

Electronic cigarettes and other battery-powered vaping devices mostly heat a liquid containing nicotine into a vapor that’s inhaled. In recent years, they have been increasingly used to vaporize THC, the chemical that gives pot its high.

The University of Michigan survey asks students in grades 8, 10 and 12 across the country about smoking, drinking and drugs. About two-thirds of this year’s 42,000 participants were asked about vaping marijuana.

Vaping nicotine is still more popular: about 1 in 4 high schoolers said they had done it at least once in the previous year. But vaping marijuana grew more quickly: 1 in 5 high schoolers had done it at least once the year before.

About 1 in 7 high school seniors this year were considered current users of marijuana vaping — they had vaped in the month before they took the survey. That’s almost doubled from 1 in 13 the year before.

Overall, marijuana use — in all its forms — is holding steady. It’s not clear if students are switching to vaping or continuing to use other forms as well, said Richard Miech, who oversees the survey.

Daily marijuana use rose in both middle school and high school kids in 2019, and “if you want to be a daily marijuana user, vaping makes it easier,” he said.

It’s odorless and slips easily into a pocket. “You can just kind of graze on that all day,” he said.

The survey is in the Journal of the American Medical Association, which also published results of a different survey in 2018 that showed an increase in marijuana vaping among middle and high school students.

Both have limitations: the surveys rely on what kids say, and it does not include teens who are not in school. Federal and state laws ban minors from using marijuana recreationally, and prohibits sale of vaping products to kids.

The Michigan survey was conducted earlier this year, before reports of a surge in cases of vaping-related lung damage, mostly in teens and young adults who used black-market THC products.*

Volkow said the illnesses “may scare some teenagers away” from vaping marijuana.

The survey also found most other forms of teen drug use are flat or declining, including alcohol, ecstasy, heroin, cocaine, and meth. An exception was LSD, which has been increasing in 10th and 12th graders. About 3.6% of high school seniors said they’d dropped acid in the previous year.

Webmaster notes: In states where pot is illegal, all THC vaping uses black-market THC products.

By Mike Stobbe, the Associated Press, Seattle Times

 

Instagram Restricts Vaping Advertisements

Re-published as a public service to parents concerned about child and adolescent vaping
Instagram is making rules to govern content in influence advertising.

Influencers, the (Instagram) app’s most-followed users who are paid by brand to post, will no longer be allowed to promote products related to vaping, tobacco and weapons, Instagram said Wednesday in a blog post.

Instagram, the photo app owned by Facebook, has long allowed people with thousands or even millions of followers to operate their own sponsored content operations, outside the Facebook ad-buying system, with less oversight than the rest of the company’s (Facebook) advertising.

Instagram reaches a young demographic that may be more easily swayed by ads from the famous users.

(Emphasis added by Counseling Washington)

By Sarah Frier, Bloomberg, Seattle Times, 12/19/19.

 

SEE ALSO:
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How Drugs and Alcohol Affect the Brain and Body
WA. Counselor Directory: find a therapist near you

 

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