Monday, February 25, 2013

Study: Why Psychotic Teenagers Smoke More Pot - Lindsay Abrams - The Atlantic

Study: Why Psychotic Teenagers Smoke More Pot - Lindsay Abrams - The Atlantic

This illustrates the problem with V-Bi statistics, there is a correlation between the two but the cause and effect may be reversed or go both ways. The other issue is whether psychotics are smoking marijuana to take their mind off their condition rather than treating it, like people drinking to forget their problems. Another problem is psychotics might be deceptive, teenagers in general are often hiding their drug use. it is then like an Iv-B contagion, users interact with their pushers and often little is known about who is taking drugs for what reason, whether self medicating or if they are causing psychosis. This is a disconnect caused by weak I-O policing, this Iv-B underground drug business goes on while in the V-Bi community it is invisible to them except for occasional outbursts from psychotic people.


PROBLEM: When we first figured out that there's a solid association between mental illness and marijuana use in adolescents, the most common, if panicked assumption was that smoking pot must mess with teens' developing brains, in some cases actually causing psychosis. Although evidence does not exist to prove that conclusively, other studies have found that marijuana is at least associated with an increased risk of developing a psychiatric disorder. But what if we're thinking about this backwards, and people with psychosis are just more likely to smoke pot?
METHODOLOGY: Researchers in the Netherlands surveyed over 2,000 Dutch teens about their pot smoking habits throughout adolescence. They then asked them questions -- like, "Do you ever see things that others do not?" --  meant to identify "thought," "social," and "attention" problems, and determined whether these symptoms appeared before or after they began using marijuana. A family history of mental illness, along with alcohol and tobacco use, was factored in to the analysis.
RESULTS: Among the 44 percent of teens who admitted to smoking pot, use of the drug at age 16 was linked to the development of psychotic symptoms at age 19. But the researchers also found that where kids began to display signs of psychosis at an early age, they then tended to start using marijuana in their later teens -- for them, the psychosis came before the drug use.
CONCLUSION: The association between psychosis and marijuana use is not one of clear cause and effect --  it appears to run in both directions. While smoking pot was indeed linked to an increased risk of psychosis, initially having psychotic symptoms was also associated with an increased likelihood of later marijuana use.
IMPLICATIONS: As with previous studies, the researchers weren't able to establish that marijuana use is directly causing an increased risk of psychosis, or vice versa. Their point is that since some teens with psychotic symptoms seem more likely to self-medicate with marijuana, it could be confounding the data that suggests pot somehow causes psychosis. Medical marijuana, it should of course be noted, is not intended to treat mental illness, and its full range of effects on developing brains remains poorly understood.

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