Marijuana Potency Surpasses 10 percent, U.S. says

The average potency of marijuana, which has risen steadily for three decades, has exceeded 10 percent for the first time, the U.S. government will report on Thursday.

Scientists working for the government predict that potency, as measured by the drug’s concentration of the psychoactive ingredient THC, will continue to rise.

At the University of Mississippi’s Potency Monitoring Project, where thousands of samples of seized marijuana are tested every year, project director Mahmoud ElSohly said some samples have THC levels exceeding 30 percent.

Average THC concentrations will continue to climb before leveling off at 15 percent or 16 percent in five to 10 years, ElSohly predicted.

The stronger marijuana is of particular concern because high concentrations of THC have the opposite effect of low concentrations, officials say.

In addition, while experienced marijuana users may limit their intake of potent marijuana, young and inexperienced users may not moderate their intake and possibly suffer from dysphoria, paranoia, irritability and other negative effects.

Potent marijuana also poses significant risk to the developing adolescent brain, said Edward Jurith, acting director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Increasing potency is leading to higher admissions to emergency rooms and drug treatment programs, officials say.

The average THC for tested marijuana during 2008 was 10.1 percent, according to the government, compared to 1983 when it was reportedly under 4 percent.

Even drugs seized at the United States’ southwest border are showing increasing potency, the Office of National Drug Control Policy says. The median potency increased from 4.8 percent in 2003 to 7.3 percent in 2007. Marijuana from Mexico and other southern sources traditionally had lower THC content then other sources’.

“The children I’m most worried about are children who are heavy users … people who use it on a daily basis,” said Dr. Lawrence Brain, a child psychiatrist in Maryland.

Lloyd D. Johnston, a University of Michigan professor who has spent 35 years studying youth drug use, said youth marijuana use has fluctuated dramatically over that period.

“One of the driving forces of that … is the degree to which young people think that marijuana is dangerous,” he said. “Perceived risk has usually been a leading indicator of changes.”

News about potency is not likely to change adolescents’ behavior, Brain said.

“I’m not advocating the use of marijuana at all,” he said. “But in some ways, it is out there. … Telling them it’s 10 percent — three times more potent than what their parents smoked — is not an argument they are likely to buy into or to even utilize in any constructive sort of way.

“I think they do what they do today. I don’t think they consider or reflect on what it might have been like 30 years ago.”  Article by Jeanne Meserve and Mike M. Ahlens for CNN.com.  For more news, information and video, click the link below for www.cnn.com.  CNN is the leader in Cable News.

Marijuana potency surpasses 10 percent, U.S. says – CNN.com.

Posted by Man In The Middle on May 14th, 2009 and filed under Credit & Debt, Crime, Drugs, Economy, Environment, Family, Family News, Health, Health Alerts, Latest News, Mental Health, Money, News, Politics, Research, The States, Your Children's Health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

3 Responses for “Marijuana Potency Surpasses 10 percent, U.S. says”

  1. Donna Trisler says:

    I would just like to say I don’t believe anyone has ever overdosed on Marijuana. Someone should do more research on that statement. I think it is impossible.

  2. CARLOS says:

    If they really cared about children they would make it so only adults could obtain the product. THC is non-toxic, before you’re ever able to overdose you’d probably die of dehydeation from smoking too much. Also it does not destroy any internal structures regardless of how much THC there is, if it did than why would the government advocate marinol which is 100% THC?

  3. Wake up... says:

    * Beer: 4-7 percent potency
    * Pot: 10 percent potency
    * Wine: 11-13 percent potency
    * Distilled Spirits: 40 percent potency
    * Bacardi 151: 75 percent potency
    * Marinol: 100 percent potency

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