Pubdate: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 Source: Geelong Advertiser (Australia) Copyright: 2007 The Geelong Advertiser Pty Ltd Contact: http://www.glgadvertiser.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1031 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) BRUMBY CLEARS THE SMOKE ON MARIJUANA SLOWLY, slowly, more and more people are waking up to the links between marijuana and Australia's epidemic mental health problems. You'd have to be a dope not do so. Mind you, it's taken Premier John Brumby an inordinate time to do so. In the past he's wanted to decriminalise the drug, arguing the amount of money spent prosecuting small-time users simply wasn't worth the effort. To many minds, perhaps even all the 400,000 Victorians who use marijuana each year, it wasn't a bad call. But his change of heart towards cannabis is better late than never. It reflects a more mature attitude and a recognition of the increasingly well-documented links between marijuana and schizophrenia, depression, paranoia, anxiety and other mental health problems. These are hardly the only negatives attributed to marijuana. A long and growing list of disorders are suspected to be tied to marijuana use. Think immuno deficiencies, chromosomal damage, sperm motility dysfunction, respiratory tract cancer, short-term memory loss ... the list goes on. Of course, that's marijuana in its own right. How many users are inclined to mix it with other substances _ alcohol, heroin, cocaine, hallucinogenics or amphetamines _ is not altogether clear but the problems posed by each of these, in their own right and in tandem hardly suggests a healthy lifestyle. Indeed, the results of a 15-year study for Melbourne University's Centre for Adolescent Health released last April suggest all too clearly that marijuana is serious bad news for long-term mental health. And it is likely to encourage young users toward other drugs such as ecstasy, amphetamines and cocaine. Researcher George Patton, who studied more than 1900 people aged 14 or 15, could hardly have put it more bluntly: cannabis was the drug of choice for "life's future losers". Findings released two months earlier, by the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, showed 78 per cent of people under 30 believed social problems were associated with marijuana. And 77 per cent thought authorities should mount public health campaigns about the effects of cannabis. Half those surveyed thought marijuana use could trigger schizophrenia or anxiety disorders. John Brumby's belated common sense about marijuana is therefore a welcome change of heart and one that should underpin the State Government's legislative approach to drugs and drug use. Australia has a mental health crisis it can't handle as it is. Pretending it's not linked, at least in part, to widespread dope-smoking is counter-productive in the extreme. And forming public health policy according to the aspirations of new or old hippies hardly constitutes any mantle of responsibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake