Pubdate: Wed, 13 Feb 2002 Source: News-Sun, The (IN) Copyright: 2002 Kendallville Publishing Co Contact: http://kpcnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1487 Author: Barry Humble MARIJUANA 'GATEWAY' TO MORE POWERFUL DRUGS To the editor: A letter written by Krissy Oechslin, assistant director of communications of the Marijuana Policy Report published in the Jan. 27 News-Sun deserves a response. The thrust of her message appears to criticize the Indiana Multi-Agency Group Enforcement (I.M.A.G.E.) drug task force for supplying information in an article covering a workplace seminar "that marijuana is a gateway drug that leads to harder drugs." As executive director of Drug-Free Noble County, a co-sponsor of the seminar, "Meth - The Workplace Drug," mention was made by several presenters, treatment, medical and law enforcement of their experiences concerning the relationship between marijuana and harder drugs and in particular, meth. I would like to offer three considerations. First, Ms. Oechslin cited a 1999 report by the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine, "There is no evidence that marijuana serves as a stepping stone on a basis of its particular physiological effect ... Instead, the legal status of marijuana makes it a gateway drug." There is a missing link, the psychological effect. The desire for that "euphoric feeling" encourages the user for a stronger or more powerful effect. Thus, marijuana becomes a "gateway" to more powerful drugs. Secondly, Ms. Oechslin's attempt to legitimize marijuana use so users would not come in contact with hard drugs is a "smoke screen." She stated, "If marijuana was regulated, responsible adults who choose to use would not be exposed to a marketplace where more dangerous substances are sold." To draw a comparison to this suggestion one would only have to look at the sale and distribution of alcohol. Alcohol is regulated and is to be sold only to responsible adults, but that has not prevented alcohol from becoming the No. 1 drug problem for America's youth. My third consideration deals with Ms. Oechslin's conclusion drawing on data from the 2000 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, that over 76 million Americans have smoked marijuana at least once in their lives. Yet the same survey shows that only 1.2 million had used cocaine in the past month, and one-tenth as many had used heroin. If marijuana were a gateway drug, common sense dictates that the cocaine and heroin numbers would be higher. This is another example of faulty reasoning, but researchers say that an impairment of marijuana use is the ability to reason. That report actually showed that "76 million individuals aged 12 and older had tried marijuana in their lifetime, more than 18 million had used in the past year, and nearly 11 million in the past month, according to NHSDA." What happened to the other 58 to 65 million young people? I would suggest that effective prevention programs, such as Noble County PRIDE, and quality treatment services contributed to those millions of young people who might have used marijuana, but are currently not doing so. Additionally, since this report covers youths ages 12 to 17; we do not know how many will go on to harder drugs. A cause of concern should be that "the 2000 NHSDA data indicate that on the average day 5,556 individuals try marijuana for the first time, of which 3,814 are aged 12 to 17." In closing I would offer the findings found in a comprehensive assessment of the threat posed to our society by illicit drugs. 1. The large user population in the United States equates to steady profits, and drug trafficking organizations, criminal groups, and gangs involved in trafficking drugs such as cocaine or heroin are trafficking marijuana as well to help finance their drug operations. Another likely factor behind some traffickers' involvement is the belief that the penalties associated with the trafficking of marijuana are less than those for other illicit drugs. 2. The current user population is exposed to more potent marijuana than in previous years, however, and strong or high doses may result in rapidly fluctuating emotions, disorientation or hallucinations, thereby exposing users to potential harm. Overall, potency, as characterized by THC content, is still increasing. According to data from the Potency Monitoring Project, the THC content of commercial-grade marijuana increased from 1997 to 2000 for commercial-grade (4.25 percent to 4.92 percent) and for sinsemilla (11.62 percent to 13.20 percent). 3. Common perceptions among users and the general population are that marijuana is not as harmful as other drugs and that use carries little social stigma. The perception that marijuana is not as harmful or disruptive as other illicit substances may influence investigative priorities, too, particularly among agencies with limited resources or those dealing with more socially disruptive criminal activity such as gang violence. 4. In May 2001, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled there is no exception under the Controlled Substances Act to permit the cultivation, distribution or use of marijuana for claimed medical purposes. The above information came from the National Drug Threat Assessment 2002 published in December 2001. "It integrates the most recently available reporting from national-level law enforcement, intelligence, and health and human service agencies including the Drug Enforcement Administration, Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Customs Service, El Paso Intelligence Center, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, Crime and Narcotics Center, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, and National Institute of Justice. It incorporates data from current national drug abuse indicators - Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program, Drug Abuse Warning Network, Monitoring the Future Study, National Household Survey on Drug Abuse, Parents' Resource Institute on Drug Education Survey, and Treatment Episode Data Set - to accurately and reliably depict the current domestic drug abuse situation." Respectfully submitted, Barry Humble Executive director Drug-Free Noble County - --- MAP posted-by: Derek