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There is much misinformation about Marijuana today because of
the efforts by some to desensitize society to the harms and risks of this
illegal substance. Marijuana is not only harmful, but addictive and
potentially deadly.

Some Common Questions About Medicinal Marijuana:
Q: Does marijuana pose health risks to users?
- Marijuana is an addictive Drug(1) with significant
health consequences to its users and others. Many harmful short-term
and long-term problems have been documented with its use.
- The short term effects of marijuana use include:
memory loss, distorted perception, trouble with thinking and problem
solving, loss of motor skills, decrease in muscle strength, increased
heart rate, and anxiety(2).
- In recent years there has been a dramatic increase
in the number of emergency room mentions of marijuana use. From
1993-2000, the number of emergency room marijuana mentions more than
tripled.
- There are also many long-term health consequences
of marijuana use. According to the National Institutes of Health,
studies show that someone who smokes five joints per week may be taking
in as many cancer-causing chemicals as someone who smokes a full pack
of cigarettes every day.
- Marijuana contains more than 400 chemicals,
including most of the harmful substances found in Tobacco smoke.
Smoking one marijuana cigarette deposits about four times more tar into
the lungs than a filtered tobacco cigarette.
- Harvard University researchers report that the
risk of a heart attack is five times higher than usual in the hour
after smoking marijuana.(3)
- Smoking marijuana also weakens the immune system (4)
and raises the risk of lung infections. (5) A Columbia University study
found that a control group smoking a single marijuana cigarette every
other day for a year had a white-blood-cell count that was 39 percent
lower than normal, thus damaging the immune system and making the user
far more susceptible to infection and sickness.(6)
- Users can become dependent on marijuana to the
point they must seek treatment to stop abusing it. In 1999, more than
200,000 Americans entered substance abuse treatment primarily for
marijuana abuse and dependence.
- More teens are in treatment for marijuana use than
for any other drug or for Alcohol. Adolescent admissions to substance
abuse facilities for marijuana grew from 43 percent of all adolescent
admissions in 1994 to 60 percent in 1999.
- Marijuana is much stronger now than it was decades
ago. According to data from the Potency Monitoring Project at the
University of Mississippi, the Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content of
commercial-grade marijuana rose from an average of 3.71 percent in 1985
to an average of 5.57 percent in 1998. The average THC content of U.S.
produced sinsemilla increased from 3.2 percent in 1977 to 12.8 percent
in 1997.(7)
Q. Does marijuana have any medical value?
-
Any determination of a drug's valid medical use
must be based on the best available science undertaken by medical
professionals. The Institute of Medicine conducted a comprehensive
study in 1999 to assess the potential health benefits of marijuana and
its constituent cannabinoids. The study concluded that smoking
marijuana is not recommended for the treatment of any disease
condition. In addition, there are more effective medications currently
available. For those reasons, the Institute of Medicine concluded that
there is little future in smoked marijuana as a medically approved
Medication.(8)
- Advocates have promoted the use of marijuana to
treat medical conditions such as glaucoma. However, this is a good
example of more effective medicines already available. According to the
Institute of Medicine, there are six classes of drugs and multiple
surgical techniques that are available to treat glaucoma that
effectively slow the progression of this disease by reducing high
intraocular pressure.
- In other studies, smoked marijuana has been shown
to cause a variety of health problems, including cancer, respiratory
problems, increased heart rate, loss of motor skills, and increased
heart rate. Furthermore, marijuana can affect the immune system by
impairing the ability of T-cells to fight off infections, demonstrating
that marijuana can do more harm than good in people with already
compromised immune systems.(9)
- In addition, in a recent study by the Mayo Clinic,
THC was shown to be less effective than standard treatments in helping
cancer patients regain lost appetites.(10)
- The American Medical Association recommends that marijuana remain a Schedule I controlled substance.
- The DEA supports research into the safety and
efficacy of THC (the major Psychoactive component of marijuana), and
such studies are ongoing, supported by grants from the National
Institute on Drug abuse.
- As a result of such research, a synthetic THC
drug, Marinol, has been available to the public since 1985. The Food
and Drug Administration has determined that Marinol is safe, effective,
and has therapeutic benefits for use as a treatment for nausea and
vomiting associated with cancer chemotherapy, and as a treatment of
weight loss in patients with AIDS. However, it does not produce the
harmful health effects associated with smoking marijuana.
- Furthermore, the DEA recently approved the
University of California San Diego to undertake rigorous scientific
studies to assess the safety and efficacy of Cannabis compounds for
treating certain debilitating medical conditions.
- It's also important to realize that the campaign
to allow marijuana to be used as medicine is a tactical maneuver in an
overall strategy to completely legalize all drugs. Pro-legalization
groups have transformed the debate from decriminalizing drug use to one
of compassion and care for people with serious diseases. The New York
Times interviewed Ethan Nadelman, Director of the Lindesmith Center, in
January 2000. Responding to criticism from former Drug Czar Barry
McCaffrey that the medical marijuana issue is a stalking-horse for drug
legalization, Mr. Nadelman did not contradict General McCaffrey. "Will
it help lead toward marijuana legaization?" Mr. Nadelman said: "I hope
so."
Q. Does marijuana harm anyone besides the individual who smokes it?
- Consider the public safety of others when confronted with intoxicated drug users:
- Marijuana affects many skills required for safe
driving: alertness, the ability to concentrate, coordination, and
reaction time. These effects can last up to 24 hours after smoking
marijuana. Marijuana use can make it difficult to judge distances and
react to signals and signs on the road.(11)
- In a 1990 report, the National Transportation
Safety Board studied 182 fatal truck accidents. It found that just as
many of the accidents were caused by drivers using marijuana as were
caused by alcohol -- 12.5 percent in each case.
- Consider also that drug use, including marijuana,
contributes to crime. A large percentage of those arrested for crimes
test positive for marijuana. Nationwide, 40 percent of adult males
tested positive for marijuana at the time of their arrest.
Q. Is marijuana a gateway drug?
- Yes. Among marijuana's most harmful consequences
is its role in leading to the use of other illegal drugs like Heroin
and Cocaine. Long-term studies of students who use drugs show that very
few young people use other illegal drugs without first trying
marijuana. While not all people who use marijuana go on to use other
drugs, using marijuana sometimes lowers inhibitions about drug use and
exposes users to a culture that encourages use of other drugs.
- The risk of using cocaine has been estimated to be
more than 104 times greater for those who have tried marijuana than for
those who have never tried it.(12)
In Summary:
- Marijuana is a dangerous, addictive drug that poses significant health threats to users.
- Marijuana has no medical value that can't be met more effectively by legal drugs.
- Marijuana users are far more likely to use other drugs like cocaine and heroin than non-marijuana users.
- Drug legalizers use "medical marijuana" as red
herring in effort to advocate broader legalization of drug use.
- Herbert Kleber, Mitchell Rosenthal, "Drug Myths from Abroad: Leniency
is Dangerous, not Compassionate" Foreign Affairs Magazine,
September/October 1998. Drug Watch International "NIDA Director cites
Studies that Marijuana is Addictive." "Research Finds Marijuana is
Addictive," Washington Times, July 24, 1995.
- National Institue of Drug Abuse, Journal of the American Medical
Association, Journal of Clinical Phamacology, International Journal of
Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Pharmacology Review.
- "Marijuana and Heart Attacks" Washington Post, March 3, 2000
- I. B. Adams and BR Martin, "Cannabis: Pharmacology and Toxicology in Animals and Humans" Addiction 91: 1585-1614. 1996.
- National Institute of Drug Abuse, "Smoking Any Substance Raises Risk
of Lung Infections" NIDA Notes, Volume 12, Number 1, January/February
1997.
- Dr. James Dobson, "Marijuana Can Cause Great Harm" Washington Times, February 23, 1999.
- 2000 National Drug Control Strategy Annual Report, page 13.
- "Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base," Institute of Medicine, 1999.
- See footnotes in response to question 4 regarding marijuana's short and long term health effects.
- "Marijuana Appetite Boost Lacking in Cancer Study" The New York Times, May 13, 2001.
- Marijuana: Facts Parents Need to Know, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health.
- Marijuana: Facts Parents Need to Know, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health.
For help with marijuana addiction:
Call Toll Free: 888-9NO-DRUGS or 888-966-3784
| Definitions of Terms Used |
| AIDS | Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome. A condition characterized by a defect in the body's natural immunity to diseases. Individuals who suffer from it are at risk for severe illnesses that are usually not a threat to anyone whose immune system is working properly.
| | Addiction | Strong physiological, emotional and/or psychological dependence on a substance such as alcohol or drugs that has progressed beyond voluntary control. For more on addiction see the section Addiction Information in this website.
| | Alcohol | Refers to ethyl alcohol or ethanol.
| | Cannabis | The botanical name for the plant from which marijuana comes.
| | Cocaine | A highly addictive stimulant drug derived from the cocoa plant that produces feelings of euphoria. Also see Crack.
| | Drug | Any substance, other than food, that changes the function or structure of the body or mind when ingested. Drugs essentially are poisons. The degree they are taken determines the effect. A small amount acts as a stimulant. A greater amount acts as a sedative. A larger amount acts as a poison and can kill one dead. This is true of any drug. Each has a different amount at which it gives those results.
| | Drug abuse | The use of illegal drugs or the inappropriate use of legal drugs. The repeated use of drugs to produce pleasure, to alleviate stress, or to alter or avoid reality - or all three.
| | Heroin | The potent, widely abused opiate that produces a profound addiction. It consists of two morphine molecules linked together chemically.
| | Marijuana | A psychoactive drug made from the leaves of the cannabis plant. It is usually smoked but can also be eaten. See Cannabis.
| | Marinol | The trade name of dronabinol, a synthetic version of THC used as medicine.
| | Medication | A drug that is used to treat an illness or disease according to established medical guidelines.
| | Psychoactive | Having a specific effect on the mind.
| | THC | Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol; the main active ingredient in marijuana, which acts on the brain to produce its effects.
| | Tetrahydrocannabinol | See THC.
| | Tobacco | A plant widely cultivated for its leaves, which are used primarily for smoking; the tabacum species is the major source of tobacco products.
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| | ©2005 remository.com |
Source: Drug Enforcement Agency
Photo Credit:US Fish and Wildlife Service
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