Los Angeles Times

More kids sickened by pot, officials say

Poison control centers say reports of cannabis-related health scares have risen steadily among youths who ingest it, some unknowingl­y

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — State and local officials say they are alarmed by a rise in calls they have received to report children and teenagers ingesting marijuana products since California legalized cannabis for recreation­al use by adults in 2016.

The number of calls to poison control centers involving people 19 and younger who were exposed to marijuana has steadily risen from 347 three years ago to 588 last year. In the first six months of this year, there have been 386 calls to poison control centers involving marijuana exposure by underage people. If that trend continues, there could be more than double the reports in 2018 as there were 2015.

Nearly half the calls received last year — 256 — involved children 5 and younger, including 38 children under 12 months old, and 64 toddlers who were a year old, according to Stuart E. Heard, executive director of the California Poison Control System.

“Parents and families should be aware that as marijuana becomes more and more available in various forms, it should be treated as any other potentiall­y harmful product and be kept safely and securely away from children,” Heard said.

California voters approved legalizati­on through Propositio­n 64 in November 2016, and the state began licensing businesses to sell cannabis to people 21 and older on Jan. 1. California­ns were allowed to grow, possess and use pot for recreation­al purposes immediatel­y after the ballot measure was approved.

In some cases, children find their parents’ stash and ingest it, not knowing what it is. Some older teens involved in reports to poison control are experiment­ing with pot they buy outside of retail stores on the black market.

Heard said a big part of the problem is that some marijuana is processed into edibles, including candy, cookies and brownies that are not readily identifiab­le by children as being tainted with drugs.

Last year, cannabisla­ced gummy snacks sold by a student at a middle school in the San Diego County city of Chula Vista made some of his classmates sick. The year before, 19 people were sickened and hospitaliz­ed when marijuana-laced gummy ring candies were consumed at a quinceañer­a celebratio­n in San Francisco, Heard said.

Most of those sickened at the San Francisco party ranged in age from 6 to 18 years old, with many experienci­ng a rapid heart rate, dilated pupils, high blood pressure, dizziness, lethargy, confusion and nausea, according to the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

The candies and at least a dozen of those sickened tested positive for tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, the main psychoacti­ve ingredient in marijuana.

Emergency room physicians also are seeing an uptick in underage patients with health concerns caused by marijuana ingestion.

Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles saw 11 emergency room visits for marijuana-related problems during the first three months of this year, compared with four during the same period last year and three during that period in 2016, according to Lorenzo Benet, a hospital spokesman.

Ten of the patients this year were younger than 18, he said.

Kevin A. Sabet, who heads a national group opposed to cannabis legalizati­on, noted that there has been a similar increase in marijuana poisoning calls in other states that legalized marijuana, including Washington. “To have such a spike in this number so early is a big warning signal,” said Sabet, president of the group Smart Approaches to Marijuana. “This should give serious public health officials in California pause. We need to slow this freight train down and rein in this industry.”

Supporters of legalizati­on for adults said the issue is being addressed by the state’s enforcemen­t of new rules that prohibit the sale and marketing of marijuana and pot edibles to minors and require child-resistant packaging.

“Edibles are attractive to young people and pets,” said Dale Gieringer, director of California NORML (National Organizati­on for the Reform of Marijuana Laws). “The new labeling and packaging rules mandated by Prop. 64 should alleviate the problem.”

Reports of marijuana exposure to poison control centers also might be up because “people feel freer to call poison centers now that use is legal,” Gieringer said.

Minors in the state have been allowed to use marijuana for medical purposes for two decades.

Heard said his records do not include fatalities among underage patients for exposure to marijuana, and most of the calls regarding children involve “minor to moderate” medical issues.

“Every once in a while there is a serious problem,” he said. “If they are showing any signs or symptoms that are serious, we usually recommend they see their physician.”

According to calls from worried parents, a larger number of the teenagers experience “moderate effects” from consuming pot, and more of them ingest the marijuana on purpose, Heard said.

“Harmful effects in children can include a decreased level of alertness and activity, difficulty with breathing and low blood pressure,” Heard added. “In brief, kids and cannabis don’t mix.”

 ?? Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty Images ?? POT BROWNIES are sampled at a cannabis farmers market. Reports of children and teenagers ingesting marijuana products have jumped since adult use was legalized statewide in 2016, poison control officials say.
Frederic J. Brown AFP/Getty Images POT BROWNIES are sampled at a cannabis farmers market. Reports of children and teenagers ingesting marijuana products have jumped since adult use was legalized statewide in 2016, poison control officials say.
 ?? San Francisco Department of Public Health ?? GUMMY RINGS infused with marijuana sickened 19 people at a quinceañer­a celebratio­n in San Francisco in 2016. Most of those affected were 6 to 18 years old.
San Francisco Department of Public Health GUMMY RINGS infused with marijuana sickened 19 people at a quinceañer­a celebratio­n in San Francisco in 2016. Most of those affected were 6 to 18 years old.

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