Pubdate: Mon, 09 Apr 2007
Source: Costa Blanca and Costa Calida Leader, The (Spain)
Copyright: 2007 The Leader Media Group, S.L.
Contact: http://www.costablancaleader.com/company/emailus.php
Website: http://www.costablancaleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4477

CANNABIS USERS ON THE RISE

The number of teenagers in the province of Alicante who smoke cannabis
is rising, as is the frequency with which they smoke the drug. More
and more teenagers take the substance daily and, according to experts,
that abuse will show in the next few years. The latest study showed
that 40% of schoolchildren aged between 12 and 17 smoke 'spliffs' and
2% smoke them every day.

Bartolome Perez Galvez, the head of the Addictive Conduct Unit at
Hospital San Juan, speaking at the III Infant and Juvenile Psychiatry
Conference last Friday, revealed the new statistics, adding that "the
cannabis problem is more serious than that of any other drug, such as
cocaine or other designer drugs."

At the same conference, the psychiatrist Lorena Garcia Fernandez
warned that the increase in the use of this drug could cause many new
cases of schizophrenia to appear in the next few years, saying that
"between 40% and 60% of schizophrenics regularly smoke cannabis."

She also warned that the way that young people are using cannabis is
not only for leisure, rather it is becoming more and more continuous,
more like an addiction. The use is not the same as it was two decades
ago, as the motives for taking the drug have changed, and it is now a
more aggressive drug than what it was. The average age for kids to
start taking cannabis is lowering, according to Garcia Fernandez, and
is currently at around 14 years of age.

She reminded those present that levels for consuming cannabis are
highest in Spain and in the UK and that the only reason that more
cases of schizophrenia haven't appeared yet is because of greater
control from birth, but that sooner of later the consequences are
going to catch up, saying that in the next decade the number of cases
of the mental illness are expected to rise considerably.
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MAP posted-by: Steve Heath