Tag: side effects of marijuana use

  • Dr. Phil Says Occasional Marijuana Use Will Drop IQ, Experts Call Him Out

    Dr. Phil Says Occasional Marijuana Use Will Drop IQ, Experts Call Him Out

    “When you smoke marijuana, it’s like opening your computer up and pouring water inside,” McGraw said.

    Dr. Phil is no stranger to controversy or making big making claims. But on a recent episode of Dr. Phil, the 69-year-old host made some unfounded claims about marijuana that have left some people irate, High Times reports.

    On an episode which aired last week, Dr. Phil was on a mission to help JJ, an 11-year-old, alleged pot smoker who, in a video clip, was described as violent, out of control and threatening. His mother says she is fearful that he may “hurt himself or someone else.” 

    It’s Like Opening Your Computer Up And Pouring Water Inside

    JJ then talks about his bouts of anger and says he’d like to learn to control it. After the clip, Dr. Phil offers come big claims on marijuana that left some experts scratching their heads.

    “When you smoke marijuana, it’s like opening your computer up and pouring water inside,” McGraw states. “A lot of things short out and it connects where it’s not supposed to and really creates problems. And this isn’t my opinion, this is hard, solid scientific research.”

    Experts Dispute The Claims

    The problem with this bold statement is that it is not “hard, solid scientific research.”

    “Pouring water into a computer would destroy the computer and kill all the connections,” Michael Verbora, a doctor with the Aleafia Total Health Network, told Vice CA. “I’ve treated 5,000 patients and 5,000 out of my 5,000 say cannabis makes them feel relaxed and calm.”

    “it’s ludicrous to equate smoking cannabis with pouring water on a computer,” David Juurlink, the head of clinical pharmacology and toxicology at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, told Vice.

    “Maybe Dr. Phil should redirect hyperbole to alcohol, tobacco, opioids, and benzos, all of which are considerably more harmful, as is exploiting your troubled preteen on national television,” Juurlink added.

    But Dr. Phil was not done driving his point home.

    “Even occasional marijuana smokers will look at a multi-point drop in IQ, even with just occasional use, like once a week or two or three times a month, you’ll see IQ drop and motivational drop across time. It changes your brain,” McGraw told 11-year-old JJ.

    The study in which Dr. Phil is referring was actually focused on “clinically-dependent” teen marijuana users.

    The Child Mind Institute reported in response to the study, “There’s no way to know if the loss in IQ is related to the cannabis itself, or what the persistent pot user is doing — or not doing — with his time (like zoning out instead of studying) or who he’s hanging out with (like-minded pals).”

    Three other studies on heavy teen marijuana use and cognitive disfunction found that marijuana use had “little impact on cognitive function or IQ decline in adolescents.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "Weed To Know" Campaign Informs Expectant Mothers About Pot Use

    "Weed To Know" Campaign Informs Expectant Mothers About Pot Use

    The campaign focuses on providing expectant mothers with the possible outcomes from marijuana use on unborn children.

    Health officials in Spokane, Washington are using a public information campaign to encourage young pregnant women to exercise caution when using marijuana.

    As coverage in the Spokesman-Review noted, the Spokane Regional Health District’s “Weed to Know” campaign is intended to provide information to expectant mothers who may have “less concern” about using marijuana, which is legal in Washington state.

    Starting a Conversation

    Representatives from the district know that while definitive information about the impact of marijuana use on a fetus has yet to be produced, they want to “stimulate some conversation” in order to give mothers information to make informed choices.

    According to statistics cited by the Spokesman-Review article, marijuana use among pregnant women remains relatively rare at 7%, but that number is higher than data culled in 2014, when just 3.9% of pregnant women reported using marijuana. That number was enough for the Spokane Regional Health District’s Community and Family Services division to launch “Weed to Know.”

    The campaign focuses on providing possible outcomes from marijuana use on unborn children, including the chance of negative impact on brain and body development.

    As Melissa Charbonneau, a public health nurse with the Community and Family Services division, pointed out, the information featured on the site was culled from studies that used lower-income mothers who utilized public health care in other countries, and who had used other substances, including alcohol or tobacco, while pregnant. 

    More Research Needed

    Efforts to obtain more conclusive evidence have been also been historically hindered by the federal government, which has classified marijuana as a Schedule I drug. “It is frustrating, because [we] don’t have all the answers,” said Charbonneau. “But the answers we do have, I think, are enough to give you pause.”

    Charbonneau also points to statements by the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecologists and Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, both of which encourage medical professionals to dissuade expectant patients from marijuana use during pregnancy and breastfeeding, as support for their concern. 

    They also look to a pair of studies, one of which is being conducted in Spokane by the Washington State University Nursing School, which is looking into how information about marijuana use is being disseminated to mothers by health care professionals and marijuana retailers. A second, recently funded study at the University of Washington hopes to use in-utero imaging to determine if marijuana use has any effect on the formation of the fetus’s brain.

    As the Spokesman-Review noted, research such as these efforts is crucial in developing a more cohesive understanding of marijuana use during pregnancy without the studies cited in the “Weed to Know” campaign, which are skewed by other substances. 

    “Universally, we would all like to see good research that would answer these questions,” said Crystal Oliver, director of the cannabis advocacy group Washington Sungrowers Industry Association. “We can exclude things like tobacco use.”

    Until those studies are produced, the Health District plans to continue to advise mothers on the possible side effects of marijuana use on their unborn children.

    “We don’t have all the answers, but we want people to think twice about this before I’m going to be put in charge of children, before I’m going to breastfeed my child, before I’m going to get pregnant, or even while I’m pregnant, let’s have some conversations here.”

    View the original article at thefix.com