High school students have found a creative new use for e-cigarettes, researchers reported Monday. They’re a low-profile way to smoke cannabis.
The battery-powered devices let students sneak cannabis, and they might also be delivering a very powerful dose of the drug, the researchers report in the journal Pediatrics.
“This is a relatively novel way of using marijuana, and kids are using it at a fairly high rate,” said Meghan Morean, an assistant professor of psychology at Oberlin College in Ohio, who conducted the research at Yale University.
“The smell of vaping marijuana isn’t as strong as smoking it, plus the similarity in appearance of hash oil and nicotine solutions make this a really inconspicuous way of using marijuana,” Morean said in a statement.
Morean and colleagues surveyed more than 3,800 students at five Connecticut high schools for their report.
They found a surprising number of the kids admitted to having tried marijuana or hashish — close to 30 percent. And just under 19 percent said they’d used both cannabis and e-cigarettes.
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“To better understand how students were using e-cigarettes or other portable vaporizing devices to vaporize cannabis, we asked students, ‘Which of the following have you used to smoke marijuana?’” the researchers wrote.
“Answer choices included ‘e-cigarettes filled with hash oil,’ ‘e-cigarettes filled with a wax plug,’ ‘portable vaporizers filled with dried marijuana (like a G-pen),’ and ‘other.’ Students could select as many options as were applicable.”
About 15 percent of cannabis users said they’d used hash oil in an e-cigarette device, and 3 percent said they’d used THC-infused wax.
Five percent of the students said they had used e-cigarettes to “vape” marijuana or hash, and more than a quarter of the students who said they’d used both marijuana and e-cigarettes at some time said they’d used them together.
“Also of concern, the THC concentrations of vaporized hash oil and waxes can exceed that of dried cannabis by four to 30 times,” the researchers noted.
“The results of this study provide important evidence that high school students are using e-cigarettes to vaporize cannabis.”
Dr. David Tinkelman, medical director of Health Initiatives at National Jewish Health in Denver, says it’s worrying because the devices make it so easy to smoke cannabis.
“It’s easy to use, it’s easy to load, it’s easy to clean and reuse,” he told NBC News.
“It doesn’t produce an odor. What this has done is it’s enabled children to use marijuana in a way that’s less detectable, so their fear of getting caught has gone down,” he said. “And that’s a big deal. Once you remove that fear of getting punished, they’re going to experiment more.”








