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Medical
Analyses
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THE LINDESMITH
CENTER
Exposing Marijuana
Myths: A Review of the Scientific Evidence
Lynn Zimmer
Associate Professor
of Sociology, Queens College
John P. Morgan
Professor of Pharmacology,
City University of New York Medical School
The Lindesmith
Center, 1995
INTRODUCTION
Since the 1920s,
supporters of marijuana prohibition have exaggerated the drug's dangers.
In different eras, different claims have gained prominence, but few
have ever been abandoned. Indeed, many of the "reefer madness" tales
that were used to generate support for early anti-marijuana laws continue
to appear in government and media reports today.
For a while in
the 1970s, it seemed as if scientific inquiries were beginning to influence
the government's marijuana policies. Following thorough reviews of the
existing evidence by scholars and official commissions, criminal penalties
for marijuana offenses were lessened and a number of states moved in
the direction of decriminalization. However, in response to lingering
concerns about marijuana's potential toxicity, the government expanded
its funding of scientific research, mostly through the newly created
National Instutite on Drug Abuse (NIDA).
Probably the most
important studies of the 1970s were three large "field studies" in Greece,
Costa Rica and Jamaica. These studies, which evaluated the impact of
marijuana on users in their natural environments, were supplemented
by clinical examinations and laboratory experiments oriented toward
answering the questions about marijuana that continued to be debated
in the scientific literature. The data from these studies, published
in numerous books and scholarly journals, covered such matters as marijuana's
effects on the brain, lungs, immune and reproductive systems, its impact
on personality, development, and motivational states, and its addictive
potential.
Although these
studies did not answer all remaining questions about marijuana toxicity,
they generally supported the idea that marijuana was a relatively safe
drug -- not totally free from potential harm, but unlikely to create
serious harm for most individual users or society. In the years since,
thousands of additional studies have been conducted, many of them funded
by NIDA, and together they reaffirm marijuana's substantial margin of
safety. Our review of that body of work reveals an occasional study
indicating greater toxicity than previously thought. But in nearly all
such cases, the methodologies were seriously flawed and the findings
could not be replicated by other researchers.
Especially since
the 1980s, when the federal government's renewed war on cannabis began,
both the funding of marijuana research and the dissemination of its
findings have been highly politicized. Indeed, NIDA's role seems to
have become one of service to the War on Drugs. Dozens of claims of
toxicity appear in its documents, despite the existence of scores of
scientific studies refuting their validity. At the same time, studies
that fail to find serious toxicity are ignored.
In the following
pages, we review the scientific evidence surrounding the most prominent
of the anti-marijuana claims.
CLAIM #1: MARIJUANA
USE IS INCREASING AT AN ALARMING RATE
Reports of a recent
slight increase in marijuana use, especially among youth, are being
used to convince Americans that a renewed campaign about the drug's
dangers is necessary to avert an impending epidemic.
THE FACTS
According to government
surveys of the general population, marijuana use began decreasing in
1980, after more than a decade of steady increase. By 1990, the downward
trend showed signs of slowing, but use-rates remained substantially
lower than those recorded in the 1970s.
For example, among
12-17 year olds, past year marijuana use was about 8 percent in 1992,
compared to 24.1 percent in 1979. Among 18-25 year olds, past year use
was 23 percent in 1992, compared to 46.9 percent in 1979.
A separate survey
of high school students shows similar trends, with use-rates in the
1990s well below those reported in the 1970s. However, after reaching
an all-time low in 1992, they increased slightly during the next two
years.
Lifetime Prevalence
of Marijuana, High Schools Seniors, 1976-1994
| 1976 |
1978 |
1980 |
1982 |
1984 |
1986 |
1988 |
1990 |
1992 |
1994 |
| 52.8 |
59.2 |
60.3 |
58.7 |
54.9 |
50.9 |
47.2 |
40.7 |
32.6 |
38.2 |
The High School
Survey was originally conceived by the National Institute on Drug Abuse
(NIDA) as a measure of non-pathological drug use. This is still what
it measures. Adolescence is a time of experimentation, with drug use
as well as other activities. Most adolescent drug users do not go on
to become "drug abusers." Indeed, most adolescent drug users, after
a few years of experimentation, cease using illegal drugs altogether.
We will probably
never know why marijuana-use rates go up and down over time. However,
it is worth noting that the recent increase occurred among the same
population of young people who had been exposed to a decade-long anti-marijuana
campaign in the schools and the media. That campaign, based on exaggerations
of marijuana's harms and a "just say no" ideology, has clearly failed.
Young people, and
Americans generally, need to know the scientific evidence about marijuana
if they are to make informed decisions about both their own drug use
and the future of American drug policy.
CLAIM #2: MARIJUANA
POTENCY HAS INCREASED SUBSTANTIALLY
The claim that
there has been a 10-, 20- or 30-fold increase in marijuana potency since
the 1970s is used to discredit previous studies that showed minimal
harm caused by the drug and convince users from earler eras that today's
marijuana is much more dangerous.
THE FACTS
For more than 20
years the government-funded Potency Monitoring Project (PMP) at the
University of Mississippi has been analyzing samples of marijuana submited
by U.S. law enforcement officials. At no time have police seizures reflected
the marijuana generally available to users around the country and, in
the 1970s, they were over-represented by large-volume low-potency Mexican
kilobricks.
During the 1970s,
the PMP regularly reported potency averages of under 1%, with a low
of 0.4% in 1974. Quite clearly, these averages under-estimate the THC
content of marijuana smoked during this period.
Marijuana of under
0.5% potency has almost no psychoactivity. While it is possible that
people sometimes obtained marijuana of such low potency, for the drug
to have become popular in the 1960s and 1970s, most people must have
regularly obtained marijuana with higher THC content.
Until the late
1970s, PMP samples included none of the traditionally higher-potency
cannabis products, such as buds and sinsemilla, even though these products
were available on the retail market. When changes in police practices
resulted in their seizure, PMP potency averages increased.
Every independent
analysis of potency in the 1970s found higher THC averages than the
PMP. For example, the 59 samples submitted to PharmChem Laboratories
in 1973 averaged 1.62%; only 16 (27%) contained less than 1% THC, more
than half were over 2% and about one-fifth were over 4%. In 1975, PharmChem
samples ranged from 2 to 5%, with some as high as 14% -- nearly 30 times
the .71 average reported by the PMP.
After 1980, both
the number and variety of official seizures increased dramatically,
improving the validity of the PMP's reported averages, although they
continue to be based on "convenience" rather than "representative" samples.
As shown below, average potency has remained essentially unchanged since
the early 1980s:
Mean Percentage
THC of Seized Marijuana, 1981-1993, Mississippi Monitoring Project
| 1981 |
1982 |
1983 |
1984 |
1985 |
1986 |
1987 |
1988 |
1989 |
1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
| 2.28 |
3.05 |
3.23 |
2.39 |
2.82 |
2.30 |
2.93 |
3.29 |
3.06 |
3.36 |
3.36 |
3.00 |
3.32 |
Even if potency
had increased slightly since the 1970s, it would not mean that smoking
marijuana had become more dangerous. In fact, since the primary health
risk of marijuana comes from smoking, higher potency products can be
less dangerous because they allow people to achieve the desired effect
by inhaling less.
CLAIM #3: MARIJUANA
IS A DRUG WITHOUT THERAPEUTIC VALUE
Proposals to make
marijuana legally available as a medicine are countered with claims
that safer, more effective drugs are available, including a synthetic
version of delta-9-THC, marijuana's primary active ingredient.
THE FACTS
For thousands of
years, throughout the world, people have used marijuana to treat a variety
of medical conditions.
Today, in the United
States, such use is prohibited. Although thirty-six states have passed
legislation to allow marijuana's use as a medicine, federal law preempts
their making marijuana legally available to patients.
A number of studies
have shown that marijuana is effective in reducing nausea and vomiting,
lowering intraocular pressure associated with glaucoma, and decreasing
muscle spasm and spasticity. Today, many people use marijuana for these
and other medical purposes, despite its illegal status.
People undergoing
cancer chemotherapy have found smoked marijuana to be an effective anti-nauseant-often
more effective than available pharmaceutical medications. Indeed, 44
percent of oncologists responding to a questionnaire said they had recommended
marijuana to their cancer patients; others said they would recommend
it if it were legal.
Marijuana is also
smoked by thousands of AIDS patients to treat the nausea and vomiting
associated with both the disease and AZT drug therapy. Because it stimulates
appetite, marijuana also counters HIV-related "wasting," allowing AIDS
patients to gain weight and prolong their lives.
In 1986, a synthetic
delta-9-THC capsule (Marinol) was marketed in the United States and
labeled for use as an anti-emetic. Despite some utility, this product
has serious drawbacks, including its cost. For example, a patient taking
three 5 mgm capsules a day would spend over $5,000 to use Marinol for
one year. In comparison to the natural, smokeable product Marinol also
has some pharmacological shortcomings. Because THC delivered in oral
capsules enters the bloodstream slowly, it yields lower serum concentrations
per dose. Oral THC circulates in the body longer at effective concentrations,
and more of it is metabolized to an active compound; thus, it more frequently
yields unpleasant psychoactive effects. In patients suffering from nausea,
the swallowing of capsules may itself provoke vomiting. In short, the
smoking of crude marijuana is more efficient in delivering THC and,
in some cases, it may be more effective.
The continuing
illegality of medical marijuana is based more on political than scientific
considerations. Although during the 1970s the government supported exploration
into marijuana's therapeutic potential, its role has become one of blocking
new research and opposing any change in marijuana's legal status.
CLAIM #4: MARIJUANA
CAUSES LUNG DISEASE
It is frequently
claimed that marijuana smoke contains such high concentrations of irritants
that marijuana users' risk of developing lung disease is equal to or
greater than that of tobacco users.
THE FACTS
Except for their
psychoactive ingredients, marijuana and tobacco smoke are nearly identical.
Because most marijuana smokers inhale more deeply and hold the smoke
in their lungs, more dangerous material may be consumed per cigarette.
However, it is the total volume of irritant inhalation-not the amount
in each cigarette-that matters.
Most tobacco smokers
consume more than 10 cigarettes per day and some consume 40 or more.
Regular marijuana smokers seldom consume more than 3-5 cigarettes per
day and most consume far fewer. Thus, the amount of irritant material
inhaled almost never approaches that of tobacco users.
Frequent marijuana
smokers experience adverse respiratory symptoms from smoking, including
chronic cough, chronic phlegm, and wheezing. However, the only prospective
clinical study shows no increased risk of crippling pulmonary disease
(chronic bronchitis and emphysema).
Since 1982, UCLA
researchers have evaluated pulmonary function and bronchial cell characteristics
in marijuana-only smokers, tobacco-only smokers, smokers of both, and
non-smokers. Although they have found changes in marijuana-only smokers,
the changes are much less pronounced than those found in tobacco smokers.
The nature of the
marijuana-induced changes were also different, occuring primarily in
the lung's large airways-not the small peripheral airways affected by
tobacco smoke. Since it is small-airway inflamation that causes chronic
bronchitis and emphysema, marijuana smokers may not develop these diseases.
In an epidemiological
survey, approximately 1200 subjects gave information on smoking and
pulmonary function at 2-year intervals. A large percentage of the subjects
underwent pulmonary function testing. Although a small group who reported
previous marijuna smoking had significant pulmonary abnormalities, curent
marijuana smokers had no significant reduction in any pulmonary functions.
There are no epidemiological
or aggregate clinical data suggesting that marijuana-only smokers develop
lung cancer. However, since some bronchial cell changes appear to be
pre-cancerous, an increased risk of cancer among frequent marijuana
smokers is possible.
Since the pulmonary
risks associated with marijuana are related to smoking, the danger is
eliminated with other routes of administration. For committed smokers,
pulmonary risk might be reduced with higher-potency products, which
produce desired psychoactive effects with less inhalation of irritants.
Smokers could also be encouraged to abandon deep inhalation and breath-holding,
which increase drug delivery only slightly.
Finally, pulmonary
risk might be reduced if marijuana were smoked in water pipes rather
than cigarettes.
CLAIM #5: MARIJUANA
IMPAIRS IMMUNE SYSTEM FUNCTIONING
It has been widely
claimed that marijuana substantially increases users' risk of contracting
various infectious diseases. First emerging in the 1970s, this claim
took on new significance in the 1980s, following reports of marijuana
use by people suffering from AIDS.
THE FACTS
The principal study
fueling the original claim of immune impairment involved preparations
created with white blood cells that had been removed from marijuana
smokers and controls. After exposing the cells to known immune activators,
researchers reported a lower rate of "transformation" in those taken
from marijuana smokers. However, numerous groups of scientists, using
similar techniques, have failed to confirm this original study. In fact,
a 1988 study demonstrated an increase in responsiveness when white blood
cells from marijuana smokers were exposed to immunological activators.
Studies involving
laboratory animals have shown immune impairment following administration
of THC, but only with the use of extremely high doses. For example,
one study demonstrated an increase in herpes infection in rodents given
doses of 100 mg/kg/day-a dose approximately 1000 times the dose necessary
to produce a psychoactive effect in humans.
There have been
no clinical or epidemiological studies showing an increase in bacterial,
viral, or parasitic infection among human marijuana users. In three
large field studies conducted in the 1970s, in Jamaica, Costa Rica and
Greece, researchers found no differences in disease susceptibility between
marijuana users and matched controls.
Marijuana use does
not increase the risk of HIV infection; nor does it increase the onset
or intensity of symptoms among AIDS patients. In fact, the FDA decision
to approve the use of Marinol (synthetic THC) for use in HIV-wasting
syndrome relied upon the absence of any immunopathology due to THC.
Today, thousands
of people with AIDS are smoking marijuana daily to combat nausea and
increase appetite. There is no scientific basis for claims that this
practice compromises their immune responses. Indeed, the recent discovery
of a peripheral cannabinoid receptor asociated with lymphatic tissue
should encourage aggressive exploration of THC's potential use as an
immune-system stimulant.
CLAIM #6: MARIJUANA
HARMS SEXUAL MATURATION AND REPRODUCTION
Marijuana has been
said to interfere with the production of hormones associated with reproduction,
causing possible infertility among adult users and delayed sexual development
among adolescents.
THE FACTS
There is no evidence
that marijuana impairs male reproductive functioning. The Jamaican and
Costa Rican field studies detected no differences in hormone levels
between marijuana users and non-users. In epidemiological surveys of
marijuana users, no problems with fertility have emerged as important.
In 1974, researchers
reported diminished testosterone, reduced sexual function and abnormal
sperm cells in males identified as chronic marijuana users. In a laboratory
study, the same researchers reported an acute decrease in testosterone,
but no chronic effect after nine weeks of smoking; they did not evaluate
sperm volume or quality. In other laboratory studies, researchers have
been generally unable to replicate these findings although by administering
very high THC doses-up to 20 cigarettes per day for 30 days- one study
found a slight decrease in sperm concentrations. In all studies, test
results remained within normal ranges and probably would not have affected
actual fertility. Severe adverse consequences have also been produced
in male laboratory animals, although only with extremely high daily
THC doses. More importantly, in both the human and animal laboratory
studies, all observed changes were reversed once THC adminstration was
halted.
The claim that
marijuana impairs female reproductive functioning in humans has no support
in the scientific literature. There have been no epidemiological studies
indicating diminished fertility in female users of marijuana, and a
recent survey found no impact of chronic marijuana use on female sex
hormones.
Animal studies
show hormonal changes and depressed ovulation following extremely high
daily doses of THC. As occurs with males, these changes disappear once
the experiment is completed. In addition, when THC was administered
to female monkeys for an entire year, they developed tolerance to its
hormonal effects and normal cycles were reestablished.
Almost immediately
following publication of the few studies showing a marijuana impact
on reproductive hormones, warnings about marijuana's potential impact
on adolescent sexual development began to appear.
Other than one
case report of a 16-year old marijuana smoker who had failed to progress
to puberty, there has been nothing to indicate that such a potential
exists. In whatever other ways one might consider marijuana to be bad
for adolescents, it does not retard their sexual development.
CLAIM #7: MARIJUANA
USE DURING PREGNANCY HARMS THE FETUS
A powerful accusation
in anti-drug campaigns is that children are permanently harmed by their
mothers' use of drugs during pregnancy. Today, it is commonly claimed
that marijuana is a cause of birth defects and development deficits.
THE FACTS
A number of studies
reported low birth weight and physical abnormalities among babies exposed
to marijuana in utero. However, when other factors known to affect pregnancy
outcomes were controlled for-for example, maternal age, socio-economic
class, and alcohol and tobacco use-the association between marijuana
use and adverse fetal effects disappeared.
Numerous other
studies have failed to find negative impacts from marijuana exposure.
However, when negative outcomes are found, they tend to be widely publicized,
regardless of the quality of the study.
It is now often
claimed that marijuana use during pregnancy causes childhood leukemia.
The basis for this claim is one study, in which 5% of the mothers of
leukemic children admitted to using marijuana prior to or during pregnancy.
A "control group" of mothers with normal children was then created and
questioned by telephone about previous drug use. Their reported .5 percent
marijuana use- rate was used to calculate a 10-fold greater risk of
leukemia for children born to marijuana users. Given national surveys
showing marijuana prevalence rates of at least 10%, these "control group"
mothers almost certainly under-reported their drug use to strangers
on the telephone.
Also used as evidence
of marijuana-induced fetal harm are two longitudinal studies, in which
the children of marijuana users were examined repeatedly. However, on
closer examination, the effects of marijuana appear to be quite minimal,
if existent at all. After finding a slight deficit in visual responsiveness
among marijuana-exposed newborns, no differences were found at 6 months,
12 months, 18 months, or 24 months. At age 3, the only difference (after
controlling for confounding variables) was that children of "moderate"
smokers had superior psycho-motor skills. At age 4, children of "heavy"
marijuana users (averaging 18.7 joints/week) had lower scores on one
subscale of one standardized test of verbal development. At age 6, these
same children scored lower on one computerized task-that measuring "vigilance."
On dozens of others scales and subscales, no differences were ever found.
In another study,
standardized IQ tests were administered to marijuana-exposed and unexposed
3 year-olds. Researchers found no differences in the overall scores.
However, by dividing the sample by race, they found-among African- American
children only-lower scores on one subscale for those exposed during
the first trimester and lower scores on a different subscale for those
exposed during the second trimester.
Although it is
sensible to advise pregnant women to abstain from using most drugs-including
marijuana-the weight of scientific evidence indicates that marijuana
has few adverse consequences for the developing human fetus.
CLAIM #8: MARIJUANA
CAUSES BRAIN DAMAGE
Critics state that
marijuana damages brain cells and that this damage, in turn, causes
memory loss, cognitive impairment, and difficulties in learning.
THE FACTS
The original basis
of this claim was a report that, upon post-mortem examination, structural
changes in several brain regions were found in two rhesus monkeys exposed
to THC. Because these changes primarily involved the hippocampus, a
cortical brain region known to play an important role in learning and
memory, this finding suggested possible negative consequences for human
marijuana users. Additional studies, employing rodents, reported similar
brain changes. However, to achieve these results, massive doses of THC-up
to 200 times the psychoactive dose in humans-had to be given. In fact,
studies employing 100 times the human dose have failed to reveal any
damage.
In the most recently
published study, rhesus monkeys, through face-mask inhalation, were
exposed to the equivalent of 4-5 joints per day for an entire year.
When sacraficed seven months later, there was no observed alteration
of hippocampal architecture, cell size, cell number, or synaptic configuration.
The authors conclude that: "while behavioral and neuroendocrinal effects
were observed during marijuana smoke exposure in the monkey, residual
neuropathological and neurochemical effects of marijuana exposure were
not observed seven months after the year-long marijuana smoke regimen."
Thus, twenty years
after the first report of brain-damage in two marijuana-exposed monkeys,
the claim of physiological damage to brain cells has been effectively
disproven.
No post-mortem
examinations of the brains of human marijuana users have ever been conducted.
However, numerous studies have explored marijuana's effect on brain-related
cognitive functions. Many employ an experimental design-in which subjects
are given marijuana in a laboratory setting, and then compared to controls
on a variety of measures involving attention, learning, and memory.
In a number of
studies, no significant differences were detected. In fact, there is
substantial research demonstrating that marijuana intoxication does
not impair the retrieval of information learned previously. However,
there is evidence that marijuana, particularly in high doses, may interfere
with users' ability to transfer new information into long-term memory.
While there is
general agreement that, while under the influence of marijuana, learning
is less efficient, there is no evidence that marijuana users-even long-term
users-suffer permanent impairment. Indeed, numerous studies comparing
chronic marijuana users with non-user controls have found no significant
differences in learning, memory recall, or other cognitive functions.
CLAIM #9: MARIJUANA
IS AN ADDICTIVE DRUG
It is now frequently
stated that marijuana is profoundly addicting and that any increase
in prevalence of use will lead inevitably to increases in addiction.
THE FACTS
Essentially all
drugs are used in "an addictive fashion" by some people. However, for
any drug to be identified as highly addictive, there should be evidence
that substantial numbers of users repeatedly fail in their attempts
to discontinue use and develop use-patterns that interfere with other
life activities.
National epidemiological
surveys show that the large majority of people who have had experience
with marijuana do not become regular users.
In 1993, among
Americans age 12 and over, about 34% had used marijuana sometime in
their life, but only 9% had used it in the past year, 4.3% in the past
month, and 2.8% in the past week.
A longitudinal
study of young adults who had first been surveyed in high school also
found a high "discontinuation rate" for marijuana. While 77% had used
the drug, 74% of those had not used in the past year and 84% had not
used in the past month.
Of course, even
people who continue using marijuana for several years or more are not
necessarily "addicted" to it. Many regular users-including many daily
users-consume marijuana in a way that does not interfere with other
life activities, and may in some cases enhance them. There is only scant
evidence that marijuana produces physical dependence and withdrawal
in humans.
When human subjects
were administered daily oral doses of 180-210 mg THC-the equivalent
of 15-20 joints per day-abrupt cessation produced adverse symptoms,
including disturbed sleep, restlessness, nausea, decreased appetite,
and sweating. The authors interpreted these symptoms as evidence of
physical dependence. However, they noted the syndrome's relatively mild
nature and remained skeptical of its occurrence when marijuana is consumed
in usual doses and situations. Indeed, when humans are allowed to control
consumption, even high doses are not followed by adverse withdrawal
symptoms.
Signs of withdrawal
have been created in laboratory animals following the administration
of very high doses. Recently, at a NIDA-sponsored conference, a researcher
described unpublished observations involving rats pre-treated with THC
and then dosed with a cannabinoid receptor-blocker. Not surprisingly,
this provoked sudden withdrawal, by stripping receptors of the drug.
This finding has no relevance to human users who, upon ceasing use,
experience a very gradual removal of THC from receptors.
The most avid publicizers
of marijuana's addictive nature are treatment providers who, in recent
years, have increasingly admitted insured marijuana users to their programs.
The increasing use of drug-detection technologies in the workplace,
schools and elsewhere has also produced a group of marijuana users who
identify themselves as "addicts" in order to receive treatment instead
of punishment.
CLAIM #10: MARIJUANA-RELATED
MEDICAL EMERGENCIES ARE INCREASING
As evidence of
its harmful effects, prohibition advocates point to dramatic increases
in emergency-room episodes related to marijuana ingestion.
THE FACTS
Data gathered by
the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) show a recent increase in "marijuana
mentions" by people seeking treatment in hospital emergency rooms. Using
a one-page form, emergency-room personnel record "drug abuse episodes,"
note the presence or absence of alcohol as a contributing factor, and
list up to four other drugs recently consumed by the patient.
Although DAWN began
compiling data in the 1970s, recent changes in recording procedures,
the hospital selection, and methods of statistical estimation prevent
comparisons of data gathered prior to 1988 with those gathered recently.
Thus, discussion of emergency-room trends is limited to the years 1988
to 1993.
The lowest number
of marijuana-mentions, recorded in 1990, was 15,706 (7.1 mentions per
100,000 population). The highest was 29,166 (12.7 per 100,000 population),
recorded in 1993.
Using these figures,
an increase of 86% has been reported. However, if 1988 is used as the
"base year" instead-a year in which there were 19,962 marijuana mentions-the
increase is reduced immediately by more than half, to 42%.
Despite marijuana
being the most frequently used illicit drug, in emergency rooms, it
remains the least often mentioned illicit drug.
In 1993, marijuana
accounted for 6.25% of mentions, compared to 15.3% for cocaine and 9.8%
for heroin. Even over-the-counter pain medications were mentioned more
often than marijuana-comprising 9% of the total.
For youth aged
6 to 17, there were more mentions of marijuana than of heroin and cocaine-not
because marijuana is more harmful to them but because these latter drugs
are used so infrequently by young people. In this age group, mentions
of over-the-counter pain medications were substantially higher than
those for marijuana. While marijuana accounted for 6.48% of drug mentions
by youth, over-the-counter pain medications accounted for 47%.
For the total population,
not only is marijuana mentioned less frequently than other recreational
drugs, it is seldom mentioned alone. In 1992, in more than 80% of the
drug-abuse episodes involving marijunana, at least one other drug was
mentioned; and, in more than 40%, two or more additional drugs were
mentioned.
Of 24,000 marijuana
mentions in 1992, more than 13,000 involved alcohol and nearly 10,000
involved cocaine.
Despite recent
increases in marijuana mentions, hospital emergency rooms are not flooded
with marijuana users seeking medical attention. In 1992, of 433,493
total drug mentions, only 4,464 -- about 1% -- involved the use of marijuana
alone.
CLAIM #11: MARIJUANA
PRODUCES AN AMOTIVATIONAL SYNDROME
Marijuana is said
to have a deliterious effect on society by making users passive, apathetic,
unproductive, and unable (or unwilling) to fulfill their responsibilities.
THE FACTS
The concept of
an amotivational syndrome first appeared in the late 1960s, as marijuana
use was increasing among American youth. In the years since, despite
the absence of an agreed-upon definition of the concept, numerous researchers
have attempted to verify its occurrence.
Large-scale studies
of high school students have generally found no difference in grade-point
averages between marijuana users and non-users. One study found lower
grades among students reported to be daily users of marijuana, but the
authors failed to identify a causal relationship and concluded that
both phenomena were part of a complex of inter-related social and emotional
problems.
In one longitudinal
study of college students, after controlling for other factors, marijuana
users were found to have higher grades than non-users and to be equally
as likely to successfully complete their educations. Another study found
that marijuana users in college scored higher than non-users on standardized
"achievement values" scales.
Field studies conducted
in Jamaica, Costa Rica and Greece also found no evidence of an amotivational
syndrome among marijuana-using populations.
In these samples
of working-class males, the educational and employment records of marijuana
users were, for the most part, similar to those of non-users. In fact,
in Jamaica, marijuana was often smoked during working hours as an aid
to productivity. The results of laboratory studies have been nearly
as consistent.
In one study lasting
94 days, marijuana had no significant impact on learning, performance
or motivation.
In another 31-day
study, subjects given marijuana worked more hours than controls and
turned in an equal number of tokens for cash at the study's completion.
However, in a Canadian
study that required subjects in the marijuana group to consume unusually
high doses, some reduction in work efficency was noted in the days following
intoxication.
Undoubtedly, when
marijuana is used in a way that produces near-constant intoxication,
other activities and responsibilities are likely to be neglected.
However, the weight
of scientific evidence suggests that there is nothing in the pharmacological
properties of cannabis to alter people's attitudes, values, or abilities
regarding work.
CLAIM #12: MARIJUANA
IS A MAJOR CAUSE OF HIGHWAY ACCIDENTS
The detrimental
impact of alcohol on highway safety has been well documented. Marijuana's
opponents claim that it, too, causes significant impairment and that
any increase in use will lead to increased highway accidents and fatalities.
THE FACTS
In high doses,
marijuana probably produces driving impairment in most people. However,
there is no evidence that marijuana, in current consumption patterns,
contributes substantially to the rate of vehicular accidents in America.
A number of studies
have looked for evidence of drugs in the blood or urine of drivers involved
in fatal crashes. All have found alcohol present in 50 percent or more.
Marijuana has been found much less often. Furthermore, in the majority
of cases where marijuana has been detected, alcohol has been detected
as well.
For example, a
recent study sponsored by the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) involving analysis of nearly 2000 fatal accident cases, found
6.7 percent of drivers positive for marijuana. In more than two-thirds
of those, alcohol was present and may have been the primary contributor
to the fatal outcome.
To accurately assess
marijuana's contribution to fatal crashes, the positive rate among deceased
drivers would have to be compared to the positive rate from a random
sample of drivers not involved in fatal accidents. Since the rate of
past-month marijuana use for Americans above the legal driving age is
about 12 percent, on any given day a substantial proportion of all drivers
would test positive, particulary since marijuana's metabolites remain
in blood and urine long after its psychoactive effects are finished.
A recent study
found that one-third of those stopped for "bad driving" between the
hours of 7 p.m. and 2 a.m.-mostly young males-tested positive for marijuana
only. To be meaningful, these test results would have to be compared
to those from a matched control group of drivers.
A number of driving
simulator studies have shown that marijuana does not produce the kind
of psychomotor impairment evident with modest doses of alcohol. In fact,
in a recent NHTSA study, the only statistically significant outcome
associated with marijuana was speed reduction.
A recent study
of actual driving ability under the influence of cannabis-employing
the same protocol used to test the impairment-potential of medicinal
drugs-evaluated the impact of placebo and three active THC doses in
three driving trials, including one in high-density urban traffic.
Dose-related impairment
was observed in drivers' ability to maintain steady lateral position.
However, even with the highest dose of THC, impairment was relatively
minor-similar to that observed with blood-alcohol concentrations between
.03 and .07 percent and many legal medications. Drivers under the influence
of marijuana also tended to drive more slowly and approach other cars
more cautiously.
While recognizing
some limitations of this study, the authors conclude that "THC is not
a profoundly impairing drug.
CLAIM #13: MARIJUANA
IS A "GATEWAY" TO THE USE OF OTHER DRUGS
Advocates of marijuana
prohibition claim that even if marijuana itself causes minimal harm,
it is a dangerous substance because it leads to the use of "harder drugs"
such as heroin, LSD, and cocaine.
THE FACTS
Most users of heroin,
LSD and cocaine have used marijuana. However, most marijuana users never
use another illegal drug. Over time, there has been no consistent relationship
between the use patterns of various drugs. As marijuana use increased
in the 1960s and 1970s, heroin use declined. And, when marijuana use
declined in the 1980s, heroin use remained fairly stable.
For the past 20
years, as marijuana use-rates fluxuated, the use of LSD hardly changed
at all. Cocaine use increased in the early 1980s as marijuana use was
declining. During the late 1980s, both marijuana and cocaine declined.
During the last few years, cocaine use has continued to decline as marijuana
use has increased slightly.
In 1994, less than
16 percent of high school seniors who had ever tried marijuana had ever
tried cocaine-the lowest percentage ever recorded. In fact, as shown
below, the proportion of marijuana users trying cocaine has declined
steadily since 1986, when a high of more than 33 percent was recorded.
Percentage of
Marijuana Users Ever Trying Cocaine, High School Seniors, 1975-1994
| 1975 |
1976 |
1977 |
1978 |
1979 |
1980 |
1981 |
1982 |
1983 |
1984 |
1985 |
1986 |
1987 |
1988 |
1989 |
1990 |
1991 |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
| 19 |
19 |
20 |
22 |
25 |
27 |
28 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
31 |
33 |
30 |
26 |
23 |
22 |
22 % |
18 |
17 |
16 |
In short, there
is no inevitable relationship between the use of marijuana and other
drugs. This fact is supported by data from other countries. In Holland,
for example, although marijuana prevalence among young people increased
during the past decade, cocaine use decreased-and remains considerably
lower than in the United States.
Whereas approximately
16 percent of youthful marijuana users in the U.S. have tried cocaine,
the comparable figure for Dutch youth is 1.8 percent. Indeed, Holland's
policy of allowing marijuana to be purchased openly in government-regulated
"coffee shops" was designed specifically to separate young marijuana
users from illegal markets where heroin and cocaine are sold.
CLAIM #14: DUTCH
MARIJUANA POLICY HAS BEEN A FAILURE
While American
critics of marijuana prohibition often point to Holland as a model for
an alternative policy, prohibition's supporters claim that Holland's
permissiveness has had disasterous consequences, including escalating
rates of drug use among youth.
THE FACTS
In 1976, following
the recommendations of two national commissions, the Dutch government
revised many aspects of its drug policy. While not legalizing marijuana,
it adopted an "expediency principle," which directed police and prosecutors
to ignore retail sale to adults as long as the circumstances of the
sale do not constitute a public nuisance.
This change in
policy was based on several factors, including:
- a principle
of tolerance toward alternative lifestyles
- a finding that,
compared to other illegal drugs, marijuana poses little risk to users
- a desire to
protect marijuana users from the marginalization that accompanies
arrest and prosecution
- a belief that
separating the retail markets for "soft" and "hard" drugs decreases
the likelihood that marijuana users will experiment with cocaine or
heroin
Following the policy
change, marijuana sales emerged openly in coffee shops, which were required
to follow a set of regulations, including a ban on advertising, sale
of no more than 30 grams at a time, and a minimum purchase age of 18.
The sale of other drugs on the premises is strictly prohibited, and
constitutes grounds for immediate closure by the police. Local officials
were also authorized to create additional regulations to protect the
interests of the community-for example, limiting the number of coffee
shops concentrated in any one area.
Since liberalization,
marijuana use has increased in the Netherlands, although rates remain
similar to those in neighboring European countries, and are generally
lower than those in the United States.
Marijuana Use
Among Dutch Youth
(ages 12-18)
|
ever used |
past month |
| 1984 |
4.8 % |
2.3 % |
| 1988 |
8.0 |
3.1 |
| 1992 |
13.6 |
6.5 |
Marijuana Use
Among American Youth
(ages 12-17)
|
ever used |
past month |
| 1985 |
23.2 % |
11.2 % |
| 1988 |
24.7 |
6.4 |
| 1993 |
11.7 |
4.9 |
Marijuana Use
Among American Youth
(high-school seniors)
|
ever used |
past month |
| 1985 |
54.2 |
25.7 |
| 1988 |
47.2 |
18.0 |
| 1993 |
35.3 |
15.6 |
While marijuana
use-rates have increased in Holland, cocaine use-rates have not- indicating
that separation of the "hard" and "soft" drug markets has prevented
a "gateway effect" from developing. In 1992, about 1.5% of 12 to 18
year-olds had ever tried cocaine and only .3% had used it in the past
month.
Although there
are some Dutch critics of Holland's liberalized marijuana policy, the
government's official position remains steadfastly supportive of the
1976 initiative that decriminalized possession and retail sale.
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