Here's some promising news for learning cannabis lovers. Scientists
from the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of public health have
reviewed reports from a study that involved 39,000 Ontario students
from 1981 to 2011. The studies show that straight up pot smokers perform
better in school than cigarette smokers and those who smoke both
substances. Not only that, but less kids are
smoking tobacco now than 30
years ago.
The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health asked
students in Grades 7, 9 and 11 about their tobacco and marijuana use,
and their academic performance.
The study found that marijuana-only users did better at school than
their counterparts who smoked only cigarettes or who smoked both
cigarettes and marijuana. However, the findings reflect the fact that
fewer students smoke tobacco today compared to 30 years ago, and those
that do make up a very “marginalized, vulnerable” population, says lead
study author Michael Chaiton, assistant professor in epidemiology and
public health policy.
Logically, students that don't part take in the wacky tobaccy do better, according to Chaiton.
“Now there is a distinction between marijuana use and
co-use with other substances, and it’s an indication of the changing
social norms. So it’s not an absolute that they do better; it’s that
social norms have changed and the population of people who use marijuana
are more like the general population.”
Sometimes it's like everything from Cheech and Chong's
Big Bambu album is coming true.
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