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UK: Irrational fears go up in smoke

Dr Mark Porter

The Scotsman

Tuesday 20 Jan 2004

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MANY believe that relaxing the cannabis law later this month is a step in
the wrong direction; that it sends out the message that cannabis is
harmless. They predict an explosion in cannabis abuse and an inexorable
slide into a more permissive society where drugs pose an ever-growing
threat to the nation's health. It's a typical knee-jerk reaction from
people who have little understanding or experience of the nature of the
drug problem in this country - and they are wrong.

So, what are the risks?

Only a fool would argue that cannabis is harmless, but the health risks for
most of the three to four million people in the UK who use the drug appear
to be small. The risks contrast starkly with the outlook for the tens of
millions who use cigarettes and alcohol - two legal drugs that kill, maim
and injure more people in a weekend than cannabis does in a year. Strict
legislation hasn't slowed cannabis's rise in popularity over the years - it
is ubiquitous and easy to obtain.

Reclassification of the drug isn't going to change any of this. My
14-year-old daughter has never heard of the Misuse of Drugs Act. She knows
cannabis is illegal and has not tried it, but if she does experiment with
it one day I won't panic. The odds are she will be one of a vast majority
who will come to no harm. I worry far more about her taking up tobacco - a
gateway to premature death for one in three users - or falling victim to
alcohol, either through drinking too much, or indirectly, at the hands of a
drunk.

Can you become addicted?

We now know far more about cannabis than we did just five years ago and it
is nowhere near as safe as street lore would have it, but the risks need to
be put into perspective. Cannabis smoke may be worse than tobacco smoke -
four joints are thought to be as harmful as 20 cigarettes - but only a
fraction of cannabis users smoke it that heavily and the carcinogenic
potential of the odd joint is negligible. It's the mental dangers that
worry doctors most.

Contrary to popular belief, you can become addicted to cannabis. One in ten
users risk becoming dependent on the drug - a proportion that rises to at
least 50 per cent in heavy users - and cannabis abuse now accounts for ten
per cent of all attendances at UK drug treatment centres. There's also
evidence that cannabis use can lead to harder drugs, although only a
minority of users - currently thought to be fewer than one in ten - will do
so.

The most alarming recent discovery is that prolonged cannabis use can
trigger serious mental illness such as depression and schizophrenia. One
top psychiatrist estimates it now accounts for as many as eight out of ten
new cases seen in some psychiatric units.

I'm not particularly liberal, just a realist. Maybe the world would be a
better place without cannabis, but it's here to stay. The authorities have
tried to reduce usage and failed, and are now diverting their limited
resources to tackling the harder drugs that pose a much bigger threat to
our welfare. If downgrading cannabis to Class C helps them do that, then it
gets my vote.

 

 

 

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