Pubdate: Thu, 8 May 2008 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2008 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/441 Author: Miranda Devine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) A SMOKING GUN IN THE DRUGS DEBATE Dr Alex Wodak's plan to have the Government sell cannabis in little packets at the post office wasn't just a throwaway line to a bunch of senile hippies at the Mardi-Grass festival in Nimbin last weekend. It was part of a considered strategy by the esteemed director (for 26 years) of St Vincent's Hospital's drug and alcohol service to convince authorities to legalise marijuana and other illicit drugs. In evidence to last year's inquiry into the impact of illicit drug use on families by the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Family and Community Affairs, chaired by Bronwyn Bishop, Wodak again advocated the legalisation of cannabis, describing it as "the least-worst option". Wodak, also president of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation and the International Harm Reduction Association, asserts that more than 2 million Australians are cannabis users and thus prohibition is a losing battle. But just because there are Australians who smoke cannabis is not a sound reason to legalise the drug, particularly at a time of mounting scientific evidence of its long-term devastating health effects, in particular its link to schizophrenia. It is exactly the wrong time to legalise cannabis, just as its popularity among young people is diminishing, as shown by the latest Australian Secondary School Students' Use of Alcohol and Drug Survey. Cannabis use by 12-to-15 year olds in the previous month plummeted from 15 per cent in 1996 to 6 per cent in 2005, with the percentage of 12 to 15 year olds who had ever tried cannabis falling from 28 per cent to 13 per cent. The evidence is that fewer children are even experimenting with cannabis, which is a far more potent drug today than it was when Nimbin's hippies were young. While the 6 per cent of young teens who are monthly tokers is still a worry, the trend is distinctly downward after two decades of rising drug use. That is a success in anyone's language and it is perverse for Wodak and others in the "helping" professions to deny that success, and pour scorn on the federal "Get Tough on Drugs" approach that underpins it, and which the Rudd Government has shown no signs of dismantling. Rather than drug harm-minimisation advocates admitting they are wrong and that their careers up to this point were misguided, they have stepped up their attacks, describing the so-called War on Drugs as a failure and those who disagree as "zealots", "ideologues" and "evangelists". But this is the pot calling the kettle black, for what else do you call people who refuse to change their minds in the face of overwhelming evidence but zealots? Even harm minimisers admit that legalising cannabis will create more cannabis users - because the stigma associated with breaking the law will no longer apply. Thus we would expect more mental health problems. But Wodak has minimised evidence of the link between cannabis and mental illness, both at Nimbin last weekend and to the Bishop inquiry, when he said: "Cannabis probably does not precipitate severe mental illness in people who have not been previously mentally ill." It is irresponsible for a doctor in his position to play down serious research showing the link between marijuana and schizophrenia, and not just for those who are already psychotic. What he is doing is no different from the tobacco industry denying the links between smoking and lung cancer. Medical opinion is moving against him, with the journal The Lancet, on July 28 last year, recanting its 1995 editorial which claimed smoking cannabis was not harmful to health, and citing studies which showed "an increase in risk of psychosis of about 40 per cent in participants who had ever used cannabis". Another long-term Swedish study of 50,465 Swedish Army conscripts has found those who had tried marijuana by age 18 had 2.4 times the risk of being diagnosed with schizophrenia in the following 15 years than those who had never used the drug. Heavy users were 6.7 times more likely to be admitted to hospital for schizophrenia. In a study of 1037 people in Dunedin, New Zealand, those who used cannabis at ages 15 and 18 had higher rates of psychotic symptoms at age 26 than non-users. In both studies, the link between cannabis and psychosis remained even after controlling for the possibility that people had pre-existing symptoms. Wodak also claimed this week that cannabis "is soon going to be consumed by more people than tobacco". But the facts just don't support his assertion. According to the United Nations the number of smokers worldwide has grown, from 1.1 billion in 1998 to a projected 1.3 billion in 2010, whereas only 147 million people consume cannabis. It will take a lot of Nicorette patches before cannabis replaces tobacco as the world's most widely-smoked drug. For a full demolition of the soft-on-drugs approach, the Bishop report is a goldmine, concluding: "The evidence received ... in the course of this inquiry has shown there is a drug industry which pushes harm reduction and minimisation at the expense of harm prevention and treatment [which has as its aim] making an individual drug free." The inquiry found the push for legalisation of illicit drugs flies in the face of overseas evidence. Sweden, once a harm minimisation pioneer, has learnt from bitter experience, adopting a restrictive drug policy, criminalising illicit drug use, and providing early intervention and treatment, with spectacular results. Last year a UN review of Swedish drug policy found: "The vision of a drug-free society ... has, on occasion, been derided as 'unrealistic', 'not pragmatic' and 'unresponsive' to the needs of drug abusers ... The ambitious goal of the drug-free society has been questioned ... Nevertheless ... the prevalence and incidence rates of drug abuse have fallen in Sweden while they have increased in most other European countries. It is perhaps that ambitious vision that has enabled Sweden to achieve this remarkable result." Which brings us back to Wodak. Isn't it about time that the Mercy nuns who founded St Vincent's Hospital account for their head of drug and alcohol services? - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake