Why American Teens Are Turning from Cigarettes to Marijuana

New survey reveals the increasing difficulty of keeping American teens away from marijuana
New survey reveals the increasing difficulty of keeping American teens away from marijuana
SOURCE: 'The Christian Science Monitor' A rising share of teens are smoking marijuana - a trend fueled largely by the growing perception among youths that pot use is not harmful, according to a national survey released Wednesday. Taken together with the decision by voters in Colorado and Washington State to legalize recreational pot - as well as the continued expansion of medical marijuana - the survey points the increasing difficulty of keeping American teens away from marijuana. Indeed, a higher percentage of high school seniors are smoking marijuana monthly than cigarettes. More than one-third of teenagers acknowledged smoking pot in the past year - continuing a five-year upward trend, the 2012 Monitoring the Future survey found. In addition, 6.5 percent of 12th-graders reported using marijuana daily - a 30-year peak.These high levels of marijuana use are linked to a diminishing perception of its risk, according to the survey. Some 20.6 percent of 12th-graders see occasional marijuana use as harmful, while 44.1 percent see regular use as harmful. Those are the lowest rates since 1983 and 1979, respectively. The ballot measures in Colorado and Washington could add to this perception, said Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), one of the survey sponsors, at a press conference."One of the factors that contributes to people not using drugs is their illegal quality," she said. "When you start to have a debate and you have some states where this is no longer the case, then that deterrent is no longer present." [caption id="attachment_5811" align="alignnone" width="619"]
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