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News / Health / Health Wire

Parents wonder how to talk about marijuana

The Columbian
Published: September 6, 2014, 5:00pm

CENTENNIAL, Colo. — Laurie Ritchie prides herself on being an open-minded parent. She voted in favor of legalizing marijuana two years ago. She started talking to her daughters about drug use around the same time. She hasn’t stopped.

Now that recreational pot is legal in Colorado and Washington state for people 21 and older, “it’s everywhere,” the 53-year-old said. Even on her patio in this Denver suburb, where her husband sneaks an occasional smoke.

But Ritchie is aghast at the thought that her sixth-grader and her high school freshman might stumble upon their father puffing away on a joint — or worse, that he would openly smoke pot in front of them.

“I don’t know why I feel like this,” she said, flustered. “It’s probably because (legalization) is so new. There’s still some kind of a lingering stigma.”

Legal recreational pot hit store shelves on Jan. 1 in Colorado and July 8 in Washington state, followed by deep family confusion. In the first year of what some describe as a grand social experiment, talking about pot and using it have never been more complicated for parents.

As soon as places like Seattle’s Cannabis City and Dank Colorado in Denver began peddling bud, bongs and a good buzz, “Just say no” stopped working.

Children’s Hospital Colorado and Seattle Children’s Hospital have seen an uptick this year in the number of children arriving at their emergency departments after accidentally ingesting marijuana. The Washington Poison Center received more calls about kids and pot in the first nine months of 2014 than it did in all of the prior year.

The University of Washington’s Social Development Research Group and Seattle Children’s together handed out more than 60,000 copies of “A Parent’s Guide to Preventing Underage Marijuana Use” in less than six months — and that doesn’t count Internet downloads.

Dr. Leslie Walker, chief of the division of adolescent medicine at Seattle Children’s, can’t keep up with requests for presentations on how to talk to kids about pot and its impact on the developing teen brain.

“There’s a huge need, and parents are beginning to wonder, ‘What do I tell my kids?’ ” Walker said. “We’re in this funny spot. We can either be a beacon of how to do this well or an example of what not to do. I’m not sure what side we’re going to be on.”

In 2006, a community coalition was formed to battle underage drinking in the upper-middle-class neighborhood where Kerby now works. Four years later, that group of parents, school administrators, police and health care providers began dealing with a jump in marijuana use by kids.

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