From Deseret News archives:

Scientists and kids chat about drugs

Students open up with anonymous questions

Published: Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2008 12:38 a.m. MDT
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ROCKVILLE, Md. — It's nothing to LOL about.

Students these days often have ready access to marijuana, alcohol and tobacco, but they don't feel comfortable talking about the ramifications. So, some of the nation's government scientists went to the computer chat room Tuesday to make it a little easier for them.

"How many drinks does it take to get you drunk?" asked anonymous at George Washington High School in California. "For a person of normal weight not used to alcohol, about four-five drinks within one hour," came the answer.

"Is it true that pot is not addicting? I heard rumors it wasn't?" asked x45 of Sanborn Regional High School in New Hampshire. "Yes. Long-term marijuana use leads to addiction in some people. That is, they cannot control their urges to seek out and use marijuana, even though it negatively affects their family relationships, school performance, and recreational activities," came the answer.

"Can you inherit addiction?" asked Hajira 6 of South County Secondary School in Virginia.

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"The short answer is yes," answered one of the researchers from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. "The long answer is that genes play only part of the role in addiction." The researcherHe added that the environment — such as having drugs around the house or hanging out with friends who do drugs — also plays a role.

By noon, about 6,000 questions had come in for NIDA's second-ever Drug Facts Chat Day. Because the questions vastly outnumber the researchers, the responses were not immediate, but many came in within the hour so that students could check back in before the end of the school day.

Joseph Frascella, a NIDA researcher, got manyquestions about drugs' effects on the brain. Some called for fairly scientific answers. Others for more of a personal touch, such as the one from a teenage girl who recounted her experiences with depression and her past use of marijuana. She wanted confirmation that she was doing the right thing by not smoking pot anymore. Frascella assured her that she was.

"The sophistication of some of the questions suggests that they're pretty knowledgeable about drugs," Frascella said.

Michelle Ngwafon, an 11th grader at Rockville High School asked how long it takes for date rape drugs to take effect. She knew someone who had been given such a drug but was not raped, she said.

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Kevin Wolf, Associated Press

Michelle Ngwafon, 16, notes the answer she was given by government scientists at the National Institute on Drug Abuse to her online questions about date rape drugs during class at Rockville High School on Tuesday in Rockville, Md.

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