New
Scientist Marijuana Special Report - Introduction
New
Scientist Marijuana Special ReportNew
Scientist, Feb 21, 1998High
anxieties What the WHO doesn't want you to know about cannabis Health
officials in Geneva have suppressed the publication of a politically sensitive
analysis that confirms what ageing hippies have known for decades: cannabis is
safer than alcohol or tobacco. According to a document leaked to New Scientist,
the analysis concludes not only that the amount of dope smoked worldwide does
less harm to public health than drink and cigarettes, but that the same is likely
to hold true even if people consumed dope on the same scale as these legal substances.
The comparison was
due to appear in a report on the harmful effects of cannabis published last December
by the WHO. But it was ditched at the last minute following a long and intense
dispute between WHO officials, the cannabis experts who drafted the report and
a group of external advisers.
As the WHO's first report on cannabis for 15 years, the document had been eagerly
awaited by doctors and specialists in drug abuse. The official explanation for
excluding the comparison of dope with legal substances is that "the reliability
and public health significance of such comparisons are doubtful". However, insiders
say the comparison was scientifically sound and that the WHO caved in to political
pressure. It is understood that advisers from the US National Institute on Drug
Abuse and the UN International Drug Control Programme warned the WHO that it would
play into the hands of groups campaigning to legalise marijuana.
One member of the expert panel which drafted the report, says: "In the eyes of
some, any such comparison is tantamount to an argument for marijuana legalisation."
Another member, Billy Martin of the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond, says
that some WHO officials "went nuts" when they saw the draft report.
The leaked version of the excluded section states that the reason for making the
comparisons was "not to promote one drug over another but rather to minimise the
double standards that have operated in appraising the health effects of cannabis".
Nevertheless, in most of the comparisons it makes between cannabis and alcohol,
the illegal drug comes out better--or at least on a par--with the legal one.
The report concludes, for example, that "in developed societies cannabis appears
to play little role in injuries caused by violence, as does alcohol". It also
says that while the evidence for fetal alcohol syndrome is "good", the evidence
that cannabis can harm fetal development is "far from conclusive".
Cannabis also fared better in five out of seven comparisons of long-term damage
to health. For example, the report says that while heavy consumption of either
drug can lead to dependence, only alcohol produces a "well defined withdrawal
syndrome". And while heavy drinking leads to cirrhosis, severe brain injury and
a much increased risk of accidents and suicide, the report concludes that there
is only "suggestive evidence that chronic cannabis use may produce subtle defects
in cognitive functioning".
Two comparisons were more equivocal. The report says that both heavy drinking
and marijuana smoking can produce symptoms of psychosis in susceptible people.
And, it says, there is evidence that chronic cannabis smoking "may be a contributory
cause of cancers of the aerodigestive tract".
From New Scientist, 21 February 1998 |