01/08/2007 00:00:00
Canada: Tougher controls not needed, experts say
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Insist stiff penalties fail to curb marijuana use
A British study claiming pot smokers have a 40 per cent higher risk of
developing psychotic illnesses does not prove tougher Canadian drug laws
are needed, experts say.
Canadian researchers say stiffer penalties here have traditionally
failed to curb marijuana use in a country that has one of the highest
per capita number of pot smokers on Earth.
As well, they say, questions about the harmful effects of the drug have
in no way been put to rest by the new study, which is an analysis of
past research that may well have contained significant flaws.
"Marijuana, like all drugs, is not completely harmless," says Dr. Scott
Macdonald, assistant director of the Centre for Addictions Research of
British Columbia at the University of Victoria.
"But criminalization has its harms as well, it's very costly to process
cases and marijuana is widely used," Macdonald says.
He says that by many important health and public safety standards,
alcohol is a far more dangerous drug than pot and yet drinking is
perfectly legal here.
"It's a matter of weighing the public health consequences versus the
consequences of criminalization," Macdonald says. "And in Canada it's my
sense that the public is seeing that criminalization has not really
achieved much."
Macdonald says education programs would likely be much more effective
than jail terms in curbing marijuana use. He also says the increased
potency of modern marijuana, noted in the study published last week in
The Lancet medical journal, does in itself cry out for tougher controls.
Most marijuana users, he says, smoke to a desired high. He says the more
potent weed simply allows them to achieve that level with fewer puffs.
Wende Wood, a psychiatric pharmacist at Toronto's Centre for Addiction
and Mental Health, questioned the study's conclusions, some of which she
feels were hyped in a Lancet press release that many media outlets
picked up on.
"It's being sort of stated or implied by Lancet that this (harm) is a
done deal and this proves it finally," Wood says.
"And from reading the study I don't see that it adds that much to the
already confusing discussion on this."
Wood says there is definitely "some kind of a link" between pot and
psychosis. "But I still don't think this answers the question of
causality or why," she says.
Wood says marijuana is likely only one of many potential causes of
psychosis, including genetics, and would not by itself lead to such
things as schizophrenia.
Even if the 40 per cent increase in psychotic outcomes from cannabis was
true, it might only push the actual number of cases up to 1 per cent of
the general population, raising the issue of criminalizing its use for
millions of users who are in no danger of such neurological
catastrophes, she adds.
http://www.thestar.com/News/article/241943
Source:
http://www.ukcia.org/news/shownewsarticle.php?articleid=12759
Author:
Toronto Star via UKCIA
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