Pubdate: Sat, 19 Jun 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Paola Totaro HUFF AND PUFF OVER CANNABIS The Problem With Cannabis Is, We'Re Smoking It At A Much Earlier Age IT BEGAN, claim researchers, 15 years ago in the United States, a kind of revival of the classic 1950s anti-marijuana propaganda characterised by the Reefer Madness films. Cannabis, cried American anti-drugs crusaders, could no longer be regarded as a "soft drug", was becoming more potent and was being implicated in many serious illnesses from cancer to schizophrenia. In Australia, even more alarming rumours - that cannabis had become up to 30 times more powerful than in recent decades - gained currency later, in the early 1990s, reaching a crescendo in the recent lectures and speeches of the anti-drug campaigners, John Anderson, and pharmacologist John Malouf. During the recent NSW Drug Summit, the Premier, Bob Carr, and the Opposition Leader, Kerry Chikarovski, expressed fears that marijuana was now stronger. Chikarovski admitted she had tried cannabis in her university days but had heard it was now "30 times stronger than the stuff my generation smoked". This afternoon, audiences at a Sydney lecture to launch a campaign against drug law reform in NSW will undoubtedly hear equally frightening suggestions. But a new report prepared by the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre of the University of NSW (NDARC) says there is no evidence that the potency of cannabis has increased. Quarterly monitoring by the US, the only country that has regularly measured the content of THC (tetrahydro-cannabinol, the major psychoactive substance in cannabis) over several decades, found no such thing, leading researchers to conclude that in Australia and New Zealand it is likely that strength may have increased at most perhaps two to three times over the past few decades, mirroring American results between the early 1970s and the mid-1980s. The results are important in the political climate because they are likely to shape the NSW Government's response to the recommendations of the Drug Summit. One major proposal is the introduction of a police caution system which, while not decriminalising the personal use of cannabis, would allow first-time users to escape criminal sanctions. Carr has reiterated concerns about potency which led the Attorney-General, Jeff Shaw, last month to call for submissions from experts on cannabis strength. These submissions, led by the NDARC report, are likely to form the basis of the Government's decision as it ponders the question of relaxing drug laws. The fact is, says NDARC's director, Professor Wayne Hall, that potency is not the biggest worry with cannabis use. Rather, it is the newest patterns of use - youth trying the drug at younger ages than ever before - which should become the focus of public health policies. "These claims have been made by people perhaps in good faith but they simply distract attention from the bigger issue and that is changing patterns of use." he says. "Survey data indicates that over the past several decades young Australians have initiated cannabis use at an earlier age than in the 1970s ... [this] makes these users more likely to become daily or nearly daily cannabis users and more likely to become dependent on the drug." Hall suggests that if there have been small increases in potency, these may be an unintended consequence of Australian laws focusing on seizure of large-scale plantations of cannabis, creating new incentives for illicit suppliers to grow small numbers of plants with higher THC contents. One policy shift is to look at Dutch laws which impose tougher penalties for growing and supplying higher THC content cannabis, he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea