Pubdate: Fri, 04 Aug 2006
Source: Times, The (UK)
Section: Health
Copyright: 2006 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact:  http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454
Author: Dr. Thomas Stuttaford
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)

WHY DOES THE GOVENMENT IGNORE THE SMOKING GUN?

Hand-Picked Committees Cannot Tackle Cannabis

Amsterdam, famous for its canals and artists, is now, for far too many
visitors, memorable mainly for its stag parties and coffee houses. The
city has learnt its lesson. Fewer coffee houses are now being licensed
and the many that still flourish are now more tightly regulated.

The British approach to cannabis, meanwhile, is still clouded by the
lasting influence of the 1968 generation, who revered youth, whatever
the cost, and were frightened to express an honest opinion about
cannabis lest it sound old-fashioned, anachronistic or even racist.

The Swedes and the Dutch, whom few would consider quaint or
anachronistic, have adopted a realistic approach to cannabis based on
its medical side-effects. Conversely, Britain tackles the cannabis
problem by producing impotent reports prepared by organisations whose
members have been selected by the Government. The latest report on
cannabis by the parliamentary Science and Technology Select Committee
criticises earlier contributions to the debate on drugs from the
police and the Government's own Advisory Council for the Misuse of
Drugs (ACMD). As its recommendations were dressed up in parliamentary
language, it sounds less condemning of the present system, by which
the Government derives its information from an advisory council that
it appointed itself. Although allegedly peopled by experts, the
council previously contained no pharmacological toxicologist, no
neurologist nor any research biologist.

The better known psychiatrists who have spent a lifetime treating the
psychoses that are related to cannabis-taking were not on the
Government's advisory council. The Government admitted that they had
deliberately excluded members with known strong moral positions about
drug relaxation (but not those with strong moral views about
liberalisation). To have excluded detached, realistic, and genuinely
independent opinions from the doctors who would be unlikely to have
moral views but who would have seen the effects of cannabis can only
have been destructive.

The select committee states that it intends to support a rational
classification on drugs according to their ability to cause physical
harm, and to induce dependence and impact on families, communities and
societies, which sounds praiseworthy -- but these are subjective
evaluations and it will be difficult, if not impossible, to implement
them.

It is easier to assess the damage that cannabis does to an individual,
and the impact that this has on a patient and family than it is to
judge its more nebulous influence on society and communities.

Research has now indicated, and is accepted by most medical experts,
that an unexpectedly large proportion, possibly up to 25 per cent, of
people may carry genes that make them vulnerable to cannabis, a
vulnerability that may lead to psychotic breakdown. Cannabis can be
the trigger that changes a brilliant, but eccentric and even bizarre,
personality into someone who is so deranged as to be disabled.

An example of this effect was a young graduate who several years ago
consulted me regularly. There was no doubt that she had a personality
of the type that would make her vulnerable to the effects of cannabis.
Equally, there was no doubt that the trigger for her breakdown had
been cannabis.

Most doctors see many patients of this sort, and regret that had the
patient been young 60 years earlier, he or she could well have been no
more than eccentric and might well have had a rewarding and
interesting career. What made a fairly routine case history different
was the way in which her father's response to his daughter's diagnosis
so underlined the select committee's concern on the effect of cannabis
on the family. His forcibly expressed opinion was that his daughter's
diagnosis of psychosis was a disappointment, as he had hoped that she
had a cerebral tumour, even though this would lead to her death.

Many of the opinions of members of the Government's advisory council
on cannabis are on record. Those that suggest that cannabis is
relatively harmless or even, as one member said, that there had been
no deaths to date caused by the use of cannabis, are hard to explain
as nearly 20 per cent of people who suffer from a chronic or recurrent
psychosis commit suicide.

The use of cannabis is also being increasingly blamed for road
accidents, acute heart problems and some malignancies. It is only
necessary to compare the life expectation of someone with a psychosis
with those of similar age and background without a psychosis to
understand that cannabis takes years off your life.

Equally, if not more, important to the individual and society is the
effect that cannabis has on everyday personality traits: apathy, loss
of drive and effectiveness, emotional escapism leading to a misplaced
enthusiasm for the mystical and esoteric, inadequate insight and poor
judgment of both their own and other people's abilities and actions.

Not to mention the effect that cannabis has on potency and fertility,
and its ability to harm the embryo.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake