The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More baby boomers using pot, study says

Self-medication, changing attitudes attributed to spike.

- By Carmen Heredia Rodriguez Kaiser Health News Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editoriall­y independen­t program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. KHN’s coverage of end-of-life and serious illness issues is supp

Baby boomers are getting high in increasing numbers, reflecting growing acceptance of the drug as treatment for various medical conditions, according to a study published this week in the journal Addiction.

The findings reveal overall use among the 50-andolder study group increased “significan­tly” from 2006 to 2013. Marijuana users peaked between ages 50 to 64, then declined among the 65-andolder crowd.

Men used marijuana more frequently than women, the study showed, but marital status and educationa­l levels were not major factors in determinin­g users.

The study by researcher­s at New York University School of Medicine suggests more data is needed about the longterm health impact of marijuana use among seniors. Study participan­ts said they did not perceive the drug as dangerous, a sign of changing attitudes.

The study was based on 47,140 responses collected from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

Joseph Palamar, a professor at the NYU medical school and a co-author of the study, said the findings reinforce the need for research and a call for providers to screen the elderly for drug use.

“They shouldn’t just assume that someone is not a drug user because they’re older,” Palamar said.

Growing use of the drug among those 50 and older reflects the national trend toward pushing cannabis into mainstream culture. More than 22 million people used the drug in 2015, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion. Seven states have legalized the drug for medicinal use and collect taxes from sales, according to Marijuana Policy Project, a nonprofit advocacy group dedicated to enacting nonpunitiv­e marijuana policies across the U.S. The drug has proved to be a financial boon for state economies, generating more than $19 million in September in Colorado.

Researcher­s also uncovered an increasing diversity in marijuana users. Past-year use doubled among married couples and those earning less than $20,000 per year.

More people living with medical conditions also sought out marijuana. The study showed the number of individual­s living with two or more chronic conditions who used the drug over the past year more than doubled. Among those living with depression, the rate also doubled to 11.4 percent.

Palamar says the increase among the sick could be attributed to more self-medication. Historical­ly, the plant was difficult to research due to the crackdown on the substance. The Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion classifies the plant as a Schedule I substance, “defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.”

Benjamin Han, assistant professor at the New York University School of Medicine and the study’s lead author, fears that marijuana used with prescripti­on drugs could make the elderly more vulnerable to adverse health outcomes, particular­ly to falls and cognitive impairment.

“While there may be benefits to using marijuana such as chronic pain,” he said, “there may be risks that we don’t know about.”

The push and pull between state and federal government­s has resulted in varying degrees of legality across the United States. Palamar says this variation places population­s at risk of unknowingl­y breaking the law and getting arrested for drug possession. The issue poses one of the biggest public health concerns associated with marijuana, Palamar says.

But unlike the marijuana of their youth, seniors living in states that legalized marijuana for medicinal use now can access a drug that has been tested for quality and purity, said Paul Armentano deputy director of NORML, a nonprofit group advocating for marijuana legalizati­on. Additional­ly, the plant is prescribed to manage diseases that usually strike in older age, pointing to an increasing desire to take a medication that has fewer side effects than traditiona­l prescripti­on drugs.

The study found over half of the users picked up the habit before turning 18, and over 90 percent of them before age 36.

“We are coming to a point where state lawmakers are responding to the rapidly emerging consensus-both public consensus and a scientific consensus - that marijuana is not an agent that possesses risks that qualifies it as a legally prohibited substance,” he said.

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