Pubdate: Thu, 5 Mar 1998 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Author: Robin Room Page: A19 Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Note: Sociologist Robin Room is Chief Scientist at the Addiction Research Foundation division of the Addication and Mental Health Services Corporation of Toronto. ON CONTRASTING MARIJUANA WITH TOBACCO AND ALCOHOL The recent "flap" about our comparative report on the health risks of marijuana (Marijuana Flap Gets Pot Boiling at WHO -- March 3) is more interesting for what is left unsaid in the media than for what happened about its publication. Three of us -- one researcher in Australia, two in Canada -- were asked by an Expert Working Group of the World Health Organization (WHO) to prepare a report comparing the health and psychological consequences of marijuana, alcohol, tobacco and opiates, on the basis of existing research. This was one of 16 commissioned review papers in WHO's first review of marijuana and health since 1982. By arrangement with WHO, the whole series of papers, updated by their authors, will be published later this year as an Addiction Research Foundation book by the Addicition and Mental Health Services Corporation of Toronto. Drawing on papers, WHO published a summary report late last year. The flap has been about this report, since it dropped the comparisons wih other drugs, arguing "the reliability and public health significance of such comparisons are doubtful." However, the report acknowledged the existence of our comparison paper, and WHO staff have sent copies of it on request. It would therefore not be accurate to say our paper has been suppressed. What about the claim that comparisons are unreliable or unscientific? This is very much a matter of judgement. Everyone would agree that more research, particularly on the epidemiology of harms from marijuana, is needed. But in my view enough is known for such comparisons to be useful. Indeed, both the public and the public policy process deserve from scientists our best efforts and advice on important issues of public health and policy. Two big things are left unsaid in the flap. One is that marijuana does cause harm to health. Our paper has a long catalogue of these harms. In the debates over marijuana's legal status, these harms should not be denied. The second is that marijuana appears relatively less harmful only because of the severe and wide-ranging health and social harms from alcohol and from tobacco. Even gross comparisons are illuminating on this. The accompanying table lists the main adverse health effects of the three drugs, with a rough distinction between effects that are important in terms of numbers affected and effects that are less well-established or less important numerically. In some respects, the table is a matter of judgement. And it does not consider potential beneficial effects of each drug. But it makes that point thjat there are important harms from both alcohol and tobacco that do not exist for marijuana. Comparing Adverse Effects on Health xx Important effect x Some effect known or suspected Marijuana Alcohol Tobacco Traffic and x x other accidents Violence xx and suicide Overdose x Death Liver cirrhosis x Heart disease x xx Respiratory x xx diseases Cancers x x xx Mental illness x x Addiction xx xx xx Lasting effects x xx x on fetus In a society like ours, where commerce in alcohol and tobacco is deeply entrenched, where leading sports and cultural institutions depend on alcohol or tobacco sponsorship, and where media draw considerable revenue from alcohol and tobacco advertisements, we tend to look away from the health and social harms of alcohol and tobacco. Our worries about illicit drugs sometimes seems like a convenient distraction. But it is alcohol and tobacco that are the main sources of drug harm in Canada today, as the cost-of-illness comparisons of the Canadian Center on Substance Abuse showed: $7.5-billion in 1992 for alcohol, $9.5-billion for tobacco, and $1.4-billion for all illicit drugs together.