Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB) Copyright: 2007, Vue Weekly. Contact: http://www.vueweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918 Author: Connie Howard WELL, WELL, WELL Mental Illness Medications Go To Pot Why do we sneeze at herbal and vitamin solutions to what ails us and tend not to fear synthetic medicines, even though the latter cause more injuries every year by far? The mentally ill die an average of 25 years earlier than the rest of us, but most of us quickly dismiss this disparity as something to do with their mental illness rather something to do with, say, the medications they are being treated with-even though these medications are in many cases are known to cause, among other things, obesity and diabetes. I'm not urging those suffering from mental illnesses to go off medication that is working well, but I am advocating looking beyond developing yet another new drug to addressing this problem. And, speaking of drugs and mental illness, most reporting on marijuana is actively slanted to perpetuate fear around that medicine, eagerly reporting it has been linked to mental illness. Our federal government plans to amplify their anti-drug message and emphasize that there are no safe amounts or safe drugs-except, of course, those that are patentable. And while it is true that there is some risk associated with marijuana use in teens (who are, it is worth mentioning, going to be least likely to hear the voice of caution), there is more to the story. The association between marijuana use and mental illness is tiny and one that definitely doesn't indicate a cause-and-effect relationship. The truth is that those more prone to mental illness are also more prone to using marijuana (or alcohol, for that matter) to take the edge off symptoms, which alone is enough to create a correlation. And though self-medication is something to watch for, it isn't even remotely true that all users are prone to mental illness-there are plenty of depressives who'd never, ever, not over their almost-dead bodies use marijuana, and plenty of regular pot smokers who are anything but prone to mental instability. Then there is a surprising German study that showed marijuana in fact improved a number of cognitive functions in test subjects including both schizophrenic patients and controls. And though scientists know that cannabinoids, the family of chemicals to which THC belongs, are also produced by the body and have been shown to reduce skin allergies in the lab, and to protect against neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's, they are quick to caution us that until tests have been repeated on humans we needn't get excited. Some already are excited, though, and are reporting reduced allergic responses that extend even to asthma, claiming THC is more effective as a bronchodilator than prescription ones-faster, easier to regulate the exact required dose, and without the side effects of racing heart, headaches or excessive bronchial dilation that can happen with prescription ones. It's obvious that it's never ever as black and white as those interested in prohibition would have us believe. And the facts on pharmaceuticals meant to address mental illness can be disheartening, to put it mildly. The commonly used antidepressant Paxil has been found-in studies left unpublished prior to approval and marketing-to carry a substantial risk of suicide in teens and children. These same studies also found it no more effective than a placebo in treating teen depression. And though Paxil and its selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor cousins are generally assumed to be safe with adult use, they are only moderately effective here, too, and actually not all that safe, either-not unless you call a more-than-six-fold increase in suicide safe, which was the result of testing the real thing versus a placebo in at least one study. Finding ourselves in that bleak space between the rock and the hard place of no great options when we're already depressed is probably the last thing we need. Oh, for a magic wand-or an herbal remedy powerful enough to do the trick. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek