Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Zoe Williams, The Guardian Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Mum doesn't know best The Effect of an Ad That Overstates the Dangers of Cannabis Is to Discredit All Public Health Advice A new UKP 2.2m ad campaign about cannabis targets 11- to 18-year-olds. Before you decide that's a waste of money, imagine how much more it would have cost before the collapse of ad revenues. I think the government should take advantage of this to advertise the dangers of all drugs. Indeed, so what if ecstasy is only about as dangerous as horse riding? Why not have an ad about how dangerous horse riding is? There is some sense in the ads. Cannabis was reclassified last year, from a class C drug to class B, and what's the point in making it more dangerous without a public health warning? Nevertheless, this raised questions - compounded by the government's refusal to downgrade ecstasy from class A - about why ministers commission reports from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, only to ignore them. Among the council's reasons against reclassifying cannabis were the decrease in presentation of severe toxic reactions to cannabis between 2004 and 2007; and research that found the drug's characteristics remained closer in impact and strength to class C than class B. This is the point of having classes, surely: to gather proximal substances, not to create a sliding scale of naughtiness. Presumably the government had been expecting a different outcome, given a perceived increase in the strength of street dope, attributed to the prevalence of skunk - a different creature to the 60s variant that politicians all took at university, which had no effect besides making them sleepy. Some may argue that, having braced themselves to step up anti-dope campaigning, public health ministers were justified in ignoring the science community whose expertise they had sought. Actually, I think it is sloppy and childish; but I also think that, if it were only this instance, it could be looked on as a blind spot. But, taken with the controversy on ecstasy, it is far more troubling: again public health authorities wanted the drug reclassified, and again the advisory council advised against, on the stated criteria of the classification system - to wit, ecstasy is just not that dangerous. Then came a personal attack on David Nutt, the head of the advisory council: a junior minister accused him of being on a personal crusade. This seemed vindictive and cast policymakers in a yet poorer light - which is some doing, considering they already looked like the kind of people who endlessly solicit advice and resolutely refuse to take it. Naturally, there is some very banal motivation at play, which is that nobody ever won votes campaigning for laxity on drugs. But, to give the health minister Dawn Primarolo and her ilk the benefit of the doubt, they would not overstate the dangers of drugs if they did not regard overstatement as a neutral, benign policy, beneficial to some hoodlums and harmful to none. I disagree profoundly with this: public health messages have to chime with experience. When they do they have an incredible impact, but when they don't, they are not simply a bit less effective: they discredit the promulgating authority. An individual who hears from Primarolo that cannabis causes "serious and long-term health problems" but finds little empirical evidence for the same, stops listening to the government - not on those drugs alone, but altogether. We don't need to see things with our own eyes to believe them; we're not Neanderthals. But we do need to be assured that advice is evidence-based, that the authorities haven't just ignored the evidence and gone ahead anyway. I contend that the negative consequences of this mummy-knows-best approach have already gone beyond the world of class C drugs. I bet this is why so many young people have stopped using condoms and are getting syphilis. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake