Pubdate: Wed, 09 Feb 2011 Source: Northern Star (Australia) Copyright: 2011 APN News & Media Ltd Contact: http://www.northernstar.com.au/contact/feedback/ Website: http://www.northernstar.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5149 Author: Helen Hawkes Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?252 (Cannabis - Psychosis) YOUNG PUFF ON POT AT THEIR PERIL CANNABIS use can speed up the appearance of psychotic illness, a ground-breaking Australian study has found. Dr Matthew Large, a staff specialist in mental health from the University of New South Wales and the Prince of Wales Hospital, said the risks were especially high for younger people, whose brains were still developing. "What our research has found is that ... cannabis smoking ... brings schizophrenia on early by an average of 2.7 years," he said. For young people who smoke cannabis regularly, instead of having about a one per cent chance of developing schizophrenia during their lifetime, they would end up with something like a five per cent chance of developing schizophrenia, Dr Large said. His research, which pulled together data on 20,000 patients and drew on more than 80 international studies, is published in the journal, Archives of General Psychiatry. The study has again prompted drug experts to call for regulation, not prohibition, of marijuana. With about 33 per cent of the Australian population and 18 per cent of secondary school students using the drug, in a few years there would be more Australians smoking cannabis than smoking tobacco, said Dr Alex Wodak, director of the Alcohol and Drug Service at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital and head of the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation. "Having a black market of that size is not good for anybody," he said. "By taxing and regulating the drug we would start to have some influence over the way people use cannabis. "An unregulated cannabis market is about profits, not ethics. We have a responsibility to reduce the harm associated with cannabis use." Dr Wodak added that taxing and regulating cannabis could be carried out similar to the way the alcohol and tobacco industries are regulated. "We could have warning labels on packets, we could have proof-of-age requirements, we could also have help-seeking information for people who want to try to cut down or stop." He recently told Northern Star reporter Jennie Dell that he believed the time was right for a trial of a hash coffee shop in the community of Nimbin. David Halliwell, a Fellow of the Chapter of Addictive Medicine Unit at the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, and a long-term Northern Rivers resident, said: "At the moment the cannabis industry is just kept in the dark and prohibited. "The laws have failed. We have anillegal market run by criminals. Regulating supply would be a much better way (of controlling cannabis use)." However, Dr Halliwell said moreresearch was needed to establish whether cannabis caused psychosis or was simply linked to it. Alan Salt, vice-president of The Hemp Embassy in Nimbin, said: "Even if one accepted the '2.7 years earlier for schizophrenia in those susceptible'argument, what percentage of the population are susceptible? Where are there any figures that suggest an epidemic or any increase at all in theincidence of schizophrenia? "I am sceptical of research that panders to popular prejudice or political prejudice," he said. Michael Balderstone, also of The Hemp Embassy, added: "I think psychosis is probably related to prohibition. "At the moment, cannabis is expensive. You can lose your job if you are found with it and there's quite a bit of fear and paranoia that goes with all of that." Dr Large said a number of hypotheses had been proposed to explain theassociation between cannabis use and schizophrenia. These include that cannabis use is a causal factor for schizophrenia, that cannabis use precipitates psychosis in vulnerable people, that cannabis use exacerbates symptoms of schizophrenia, and that people with schizophrenia are more likely to use cannabis. "This study lends weight to the view that cannabis use precipitates schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, perhaps by an interaction betweengenetic and environmental factors," he said. A spokesperson for the Minister for Police Michael Daley said the NSWGovernment had no plans to change the drug policy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom