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Friday, September 30, 2016

CDC: Adults more likely to smoke pot than teens



    The growing rooms at Giving Tree Wellness Center are filled with marijuana plants. These ones still have a few weeks until they reach maturity. (Photo by Danielle Kernkamp/Cronkite News)This marijuana is produced in the “drying” room, where the cannabis loses 7 percent of its size, at Giving Tree Wellness Center in Phoenix. (Photo by Danielle Kernkamp/Cronkite News)
    LEFT: The growing rooms at Giving Tree Wellness Center are filled with marijuana plants. These ones still have a few weeks until they reach maturity. (Photo by Danielle Kernkamp/Cronkite News)
    RIGHT: This marijuana is produced in the “drying” room, where the cannabis loses 7 percent of its size, at Giving Tree Wellness Center in Phoenix. (Photo by Danielle Kernkamp/Cronkite News)

    By DANIELLE KERNKAMP
    Cronkite News 

    PHOENIX – When people used to ask Lilach Power about her profession, she would tell them she owns a wellness center in Phoenix. Now, she’s far more open about what she does.

    “Now I say, ‘I operate a medical cannabis facility,’” said Power, the managing director of Giving Tree Wellness Center.

    Power’s candidness about her job mirrors changes in the nation’s attitude toward marijuana. According to the Pew Research Center, support for the legalization of marijuana is “rapidly outpacing opposition” – a major change from the 1970s.

    In fact, another recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicated that middle-aged parents are more likely to smoke marijuana than their teenage children.

    The data shows that marijuana use in teens has declined while usage in adults has surged.

    The CDC study shows that 8 percent of adults age 35 to 44 reported smoking marijuana regularly. In addition, marijuana use has doubled in U.S. adults age 45 to 55, quadrupled for those 55 to 64 and tripled for those 65 and older from 2002 to 2014.
    One potential reason for the uptick: More states have legalized both recreational and medical marijuana use.

    In Arizona, voters approved of medical marijuana in 2010. Now, the Department of Health Services reports there are nearly 100,000 qualifying patients in the state.
    Victor Contreras is one of those patients.

    “Being in the Marine Corps, and being a combat veteran, I lost 20 friends in Afghanistan,” Contreras said.

    Contreras said he relies on medical marijuana to treat his post-traumatic stress disorder. The disorder affects 11 to 30 percent of veterans, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

    Gina Berman, the medical director of Giving Tree Wellness Center in Phoenix, said medical marijuana can help.

    “It’s been very helpful for patients, especially going through chemotherapy or (those who) have had a traumatic event in their life, that it’s now an option for them,” Berman said.

    Eighty-one percent of Arizona’s medical marijuana cardholders list chronic pain as their qualifying medical condition. The second largest group is post-traumatic stress disorder with 1 percent.

    Contreras, 29, has a 4-year-old son.

    “I really don’t hide it from my son at all,” he said. “If he asks questions, I tell him exactly what it is. Once he gets older, if he’s of age, he can do it.”

    Power said she talks to moms – both clients and those in her social circle – to help eliminate the stigma surrounding cannabis.

    “They have pain, and they haven’t been functioning, or they want to relax at night and breathe, or they want that energy kick,” Power said. “People use it for so many different things, and it’s been amazing.”

    Both Power and Berman are moms themselves and said it’s time to get rid of the bad reputation that follows marijuana.

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