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"I realized I could get by without the narcotics," Parks said, referring to prescription painkillers. "I am essentially pain-free." But there's also the risk that health problems already faced by older people can be exacerbated by regular marijuana use. Older users could be at risk for falls if they become dizzy, smoking it increases the risk of heart disease and it can cause congnitive impairment, said Dr. William Dale, chief of geriatrics and palliative medicine at the University of Chicago Medical Center. He said he'd caution against using it even if a patient cites benefits. "There are other better ways to achieve the same effects," he said. Pete Delany, director of applied studies at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, said boomers' drug use defied stereotypes, but is important to address. "When you think about people who are 50 and older you don't generally think of them as using illicit drugs
-- the occasional Hunter Thompson or the kind of hippie dippie guy that gets a lot of press maybe," he said. "As a nation, it's important to us to say,
'It's not just young people using drugs it's older people using drugs.'" In conversations, older marijuana users often say they smoke in less social settings than when they were younger, frequently preferring to enjoy the drug privately. They say the quality (and price) of the drug has increased substantially since their youth and they aren't as paranoid about using it. Dennis Day, a 61-year-old attorney in Columbus, Ohio, said when he used to get high, he wore dark glasses to disguise his red eyes, feared talking to people on the street and worried about encountering police. With age, he says, any drawbacks to the drug have disappeared. "My eyes no longer turn red, I no longer get the munchies," Day said. "The primary drawbacks to me now are legal." Siegel bucks the trend as someone who was well into her 50s before she tried pot for the first time. She can muster only one frustration with the drug. "I never learned how to roll a joint," she said. "It's just a big nuisance. It's much easier to fill a pipe."
[Associated
Press;
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