High school students who smoke marijuana regularly were found to show poorer school performance, finds study.

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Smoking marijuana regularly has been linked to poor school performance among high school students.
"The findings support the importance of preventing and delaying the initiation of marijuana use among adolescents," said Scott Leatherdale, a professor in the School of Public Health and Health Systems and head of COMPASS, the largest longitudinal study of substance use among youth. "More youth today use marijuana than cigarettes, yet public health prevention efforts lag behind those of alcohol and tobacco."
The human brain actively develops until a person reaches their early twenties. Studies suggest that adults who smoked the drug regularly during adolescence exhibit reduced neural connectivity in regions responsible for memory, learning and inhibitions.
"We've seen reductions in the number of youth perceiving marijuana as harmful, yet they have greater vulnerability to adverse consequences," said Karen Patte, a post-doctoral fellow and lead author of the paper. "We found that the more frequently students started using the drug, the greater their risk of poor school performance and engagement."
The study also looked at the effects of alcohol use on academic aspirations and expectations. Unlike marijuana, students initiating regular alcohol use tended to report goals to pursue post-secondary education.
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