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Pot-Smoking Teens May Become Slower-Thinking Adults

Teens may lose IQ points later in life if they smoke marijuana before age 18, according to a study that follows a survey showing use of the drug has increased in this age group for four straight years.

The research reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found an average decline of eight points on IQ, or intelligence quotient, tests done at age 13 and 38 among those who began using marijuana as teenagers. That compared with no decrease in those who used pot later in life, and a slight increase in those who never used it.

Because marijuana is the most frequently used illegal drug in the U.S., looking into how it changes the brain is important, said Madeline Meier, a post-doctoral researcher at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, who led the study. Daily use among high school seniors is at a 30-year peak, according to a 2011 survey by the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Bethesda, Maryland.

“What this says is not don’t ever do it, but if you do it during this critical period of development, you’ll get these long-term negative changes,” said Staci Gruber, an assistant professor of psychology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who wasn’t involved in the study. “In almost every case, the subjects who started as adults don’t have declines. Those who started as teenagers do.”

Tests for intelligence quotient, or IQ, measure a person’s capacity to learn, apply knowledge, and use abstract reasoning. The average score is 100.

Although a drop of eight points may not seem like much, going from a score of 100 to 92 drops someone from being in the 50th percentile in intelligence to the 29th, Duke’s Meier said.

School Survey

The 2011 report by the institute on drug abuse found that about 6 percent of 12th graders smoked pot 20 or more times in the 30 days before the survey; 46 percent of high school seniors had tried it at least once, according to the U.S. agency’s annual Monitoring the Future survey of U.S. High Schools.

The research released yesterday used a cohort of more than 1,000 New Zealanders in the Dunedin Study, who have been followed since their births in 1972 through 1973. Previous work, including a 2010 finding by Harvard’s Gruber that early marijuana use may change the brain structure, couldn’t rule out other underlying factors that may have contributing to the brain changes.

The Dunedin cohort may help settle those questions. The group got IQ tests at 13, before any of them began smoking weed. They were tested again at 38. Friend and family, who were routinely interviewed as part of the study, said these people had attention and memory problems.

Executive Functioning

The decline in IQ couldn’t be explained by alcohol or other drug use, or education gaps between those who smoked pot as adolescents and those who didn’t, the study found. The greatest impairments were in processing speed and executive functioning, a name for the mental processes involved in planning, organizing, and detail work.

“Most other studies had data at one time point, and they couldn’t rule out that cognitive deficits were already in play,” Meier said. “We ruled that out.”

The brain makes a lot of changes in adolescence, Meier and Gruber said. Marijuana may interfere with those changes, making it more difficult for those who used as adolescents to think. It’s not clear from the new data what dose might be harmful, Meier said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Lopatto in New York at elopatto@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net.

Bloomberg moderates all comments. Comments that are abusive or off-topic will not be posted to the site. Excessively long comments may be moderated as well. Bloomberg cannot facilitate requests to remove comments or explain individual moderation decisions.

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Today’s national average mortgage rates. Rates may include points.
Type Today 1 Mo
30 Year Fixed Jumbo 3.99% 3.95%
30 Year Fixed 3.65% 3.51%
15 Year Fixed 2.80% 2.74%
10 Year Fixed 2.89% 2.97%
30 Year Fixed Refi 3.64% 3.50%
15 Year Fixed Refi 2.79% 2.71%
5/1 ARM 2.59% 2.61%
5/1 ARM Refi 2.60% 2.56%
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Today’s average home equity rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
$30K HELOC 5.35% 5.24%
$50K HELOC 4.56% 4.60%
$75K HELOC 4.57% 4.54%
$100K HELOC 4.27% 4.27%
$30K Home Equity Loan 5.95% 6.06%
$50K Home Equity Loan 5.97% 6.02%
$75K Home Equity Loan 5.94% 5.98%
$100K Home Equity Loan 5.80% 5.84%
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Today’s average savings rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
5 Year CD 1.23% 1.21%
2 Year CD 0.72% 0.66%
1 Year CD 0.59% 0.52%
MMA $10K+ 0.47% 0.50%
MMA $50K+ 0.69% 0.71%
MMA Savings Jumbo 0.58% 0.60%
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Today’s average auto loan rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
60 Months Used Car 2.97% 2.94%
48 Months Used Car 2.92% 3.12%
36 Months Used Car 2.88% 2.96%
72 Months New Car 2.45% 2.98%
60 Months New Car 2.53% 2.68%
48 Months New Car 2.44% 2.60%
60 Months Auto Refi 4.15% 4.37%
36 Months Auto Refi 3.60% 3.77%
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Today’s average credit card rates nationwide.
Type Today 1 Mo
Standard Variable 14.12% 14.12%
Standard Fixed 13.23% 13.23%
Gold Variable 12.70% 12.70%
Gold Fixed 11.99% 11.99%
Platinum Variable 15.53% 15.46%
Platinum Fixed 12.70% 12.70%
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