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UK: Is it time to stir the pot debate?

Madeleine Brindley

Western Mail, UK

Monday 06 Feb 2006

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PUBLIC health chiefs in Wales have called for a "mature" debate on
whether to decriminalise illegal drugs.

The call comes after new research from the Netherlands has revealed that
teenagers who smoke cannabis are six times more likely to use "harder"
drugs later in their life.

But studies in countries which have not followed Dutch liberalism, have
shown cannabis use is significantly higher.

This would, theoretically, suggest that the number of people who move
from cannabis to other illicit drugs is also higher.

And it follows the shocking case of an 11-year-old girl in Glasgow who
collapsed at school after smoking heroin - she told doctors she had been
using the Class A drug for two months.

Dr Paul Walker, PHA Cymru - the Welsh public health association - said
the time was now right to have a frank and open debate about
decriminalising drugs in the UK.

He has urged politicians not to shy away from the subject, arguing that
the next general election was far enough away in the future to allow
such discussions to take place, without them having an impact on MPs'
political careers.

Dr Walker said, "Difficult as it might be we need to have this debate -
a mature open debate with all evidence and all angles considered and
weighed in the balance of the public good.

"It is a depressing fact that most politicians seem to find the topic
too difficult to handle and shy away at great speed from such a debate.

"And now is exactly the right time to have such a debate, when the next
general election is years away and government is more amenable to
discussing controversial issues."

Evidence from Holland, published in the British Medical Journal,
indicates that teenagers who use cannabis are six times more likely to
use hard drugs later in life than non-users.

Dr Walker said, "The Dutch policy is based on the premise that cannabis
use is different to hard drug use and that the one does not lead to the
other.

"It would now seem that this premise may be erroneous and that the Dutch
authorities should rethink their policy of tolerance.

"However, the findings of this study have to be set against some other
evidence which is probably even more significant, namely, that a
tolerant attitude to cannabis use and availability leads to lower use of
cannabis than a restrictive attitude.

"So the proportion of adults who have ever used cannabis in Holland is
in the order of 12% whereas in the United States and Australia, both of
which have much more restrictive policies, the proportions are twice and
three times as high respectively.

"This latter finding reflects that well-known phenomenon that young
people are much more attracted to things which are forbidden than to
things which are generally accepted.

"This is part of adolescent rebellion, which is a normal part of growing up.

"And this phenomenon must be taken into account in all our health
promotion policies relating to the young.

"One possible lesson is that we should decriminalise cannabis use too on
the grounds that this would immediately reduce the level of use among
youngsters and reduce the risk of severe mental disturbance among this
particularly susceptible group.

"Many would think that this would be a step too far and would be opposed
to following the Dutch example.

"It would indeed be a serious step to take and should not be done
without a full debate about the meaning and relevance of the Dutch
experience and the pros and cons of decriminalisation."

Home Secretary Charles Clarke last month announced that cannabis would
remain a Class C drug in England and Wales - it was downgraded from
Class B two years ago.

He said he had been influenced by evidence that cannabis use in England
and Wales had fallen among 16 to 24-year-olds from 28% in 1998 to less
than 24% in 2000.

He said, "The level of classification is only one among the issues to be
addressed and that priority needs to be given to proper enforcement of
the law, to education and to campaigning against the use of cannabis."

 

 

 

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