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UK: Mental problems soar among children using cannabis

Will Iredale and Holly Watt

The Sunday Times

Sunday 18 Sep 2005

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THE number of children treated for mental disorders caused by smoking
cannabis has quadrupled since the government downgraded the legal status of
the drug, according to a leading drug charity.

Since April last year, three months after police stopped arresting anyone
found in possession of small amounts of the drug, the overall number of
users treated for such conditions rose 42%, according to data from Addaction.

But it is the figure for children that will cause the greatest alarm.
Addaction treated 1,575 cannabis users for psychotic problems between April
2004 and April 2005, of whom 181 were aged 15 or below - a rise of 136 on
the previous year.

Many experts blame the relaxation of the law and the wider use of skunk, a
high-strength variant of cannabis.

"A minority of people who take it repeatedly and over a long period,
particularly people who take it as adolescents, will suffer psychotic
episodes. They may ultimately suffer schizophrenia," said Robin Murray,
professor of psychiatry at King's College London.

Addaction's findings are backed up by recent government figures that reveal
a 22% leap in hospital admissions attributed directly to cannabis. They
show that 710 people were sent to hospital with mental illness caused by
cannabis in the 12 months to April 2004, up from 580 in the two previous years.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs is meeting next weekend to
decide whether there should be a full review of the working of the cannabis
law. It was set up by Charles Clarke, the home secretary, after research
released earlier this year suggested cannabis may cause mental illness.

A New Zealand research project involving 1,000 people born in 1977 found
that cannabis could double the risk of mental illnesses such as
schizophrenia. A Dutch study by Professor Jim van Os also discovered that
frequent cannabis use during adolescence increased the risk of psychotic
symptoms later in life, especially among those genetically vulnerable to
mental illness.

A member of the committee said this weekend, however, that the panel was
unlikely to recommend any revision of the law because there was still
insufficient evidence to show any increased risk. One option it is
considering is upgrading skunk but leaving "ordinary" cannabis as a class C
drug.

Jonathan McDonnell, project manager for the Buckinghamshire branch of Young
Addaction, said that last year 250 cannabis users under 19 were referred to
his unit for treatment; 85% of those were skunk users.

He said that the higher street price of skunk - UKP20 for an eighth of an
ounce rather than UKP12 for normal cannabis - meant that many users were
now involved in "junkie crimes" such as burglary and robbery, traditionally
the preserve of hard-drug users.

 

 

 

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