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Marijuana plants. File photo: AFP

Open to dope: Japanese junior high school students are OK with marijuana use, survey suggests

  • Researchers blame internet videos for the increase in interest in drugs, which was still a tiny 1.9 per cent out of the 70,000 people surveyed
Japan

Japanese junior high school students have become more open to the use of marijuana, in part due to the influence of the internet, an official survey suggested.

In the biennial survey conducted last year by the National Centre of Neurology and Psychiatry, 1.9 per cent of about 70,000 junior high school students polled said they do not mind at all about its use or do not mind if just a little is used, up from 1.5 per cent in 2016.

Students in class at a school in Tokyo. Photo: AP

While the number of juvenile cases involving marijuana use is on the rise in Japan, of the respondents, 0.3 per cent said they have experienced taking illegal drugs, including stimulants. The percentage has not changed since the previous survey.

Takuya Shimane, a researcher at the national centre who was in charge of the survey, said the increased use of the internet is one of the biggest factors behind young people becoming more open to illegal drugs and that it is important to raise awareness about a number of problems associated with some of them.

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“There is no doubting that they are influenced by watching videos of drug use and developments abroad decriminalising marijuana,” Shimane said.

The survey, the 12th of its kind, was conducted from September to December in 2018 and covered 183 schools across the country.

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