Showing posts with label NCPIC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCPIC. Show all posts

Thursday 23 September 2010

What Happens When You Can’t Trust the Experts?

I have a general rule when it comes to drug policy … trust the experts. But what happens when the experts start dishing out anti-drug rhetoric reminiscent of our politicians?

This week, the Sydney Morning Herald published an article by 2 of Australia’s leading experts on drugs, Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall. As I read through their article, I couldn’t help but notice some perplexing issues in their argument which prompted me to question my existing beliefs. Have I been wrong all this time? After some checking and careful consideration, I concluded that I wasn’t wrong at all but the article itself was flawed.

Interestingly, the title of the article is, Beating The Drug Trade Isn't About Black-And-White Solutions. It’s interesting because the authors go on to give an almost black-and-white argument against against any solution that may well end the drug trade. 

Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall focus on 5 points which they claimed were key to the drug debate.

The war on drugs has failed because it's still easy to obtain illegal drugs
This is like arguing that the laws against drink driving have failed because thousands of people each year continue to drink and drive.

The purpose of drug law enforcement is not to make illicit drugs impossible to obtain. The primary justification for prohibition (and the enforcement activity that underpins it) is that it keeps illicit drug prices much higher than they would otherwise be. This, in turn, keeps illicit drug consumption and drug-related harm lower than they would otherwise be. The heroin shortage in 2000 showed us that higher drug prices do reduce levels of drug-related crime, morbidity and mortality. We ought, therefore, to be wary of any policy that reduces the cost of illegal drugs.

Apples and oranges - people are not addicted to drink-driving and any pressure to cease this practice will deter those who drink and drive. And occurrences of drink-driving have decreased considerably since we started educating the public to the dangers involved along with the police who regularly blitz the roads with booze busses and mobile patrols. But, for all the scare campaigns and billions spent on policing, drug use has increased ten fold since the 1970s. We are less likely to drive around drunk anymore because we are bound to get caught but since we started in earnest to police drugs, they are now cheaper, more available and stronger. In other words, the drink-driving strategies have worked but the "War on Drugs" has failed miserably by any standard.

The heroin draught argument needs some clarification. There was no “heroin draught” after 2000 but a return to the same levels before the heroin surge in 1997. The return to higher prices just cleaned out the recent and casual users who took it up when heroin was awash in the community. The hard core users remained.

The main point missed by Weatherburn and Hall, is the carnage caused by higher prices. Increasing prices for illicit drugs has clearly shown to cause more violence and crime. Addicts will commit crime to feed their addiction which is purely a result of high prices. If the purpose of prohibition is to increase prices and therefore reduce drug use and harm, then prohibition isn’t working very well.

If we legalise drug use and possession, more people will use illicit drugs
This argument sounds plausible because most people won't do something they know to be illegal.

However, the fact is that most studies of drug use decriminalisation find it has little effect on the prevalence of illicit drug use, except where the state turns a blind eye to drug supply (as happened a few years ago in the Netherlands).

There is a risk that decriminalising illicit drug use will increase consumption among existing dependent users. Since they account for most of the harm associated with illicit drug use, this is a matter for concern. Treatment, however, is almost certainly more effective than punishment in reducing drug consumption among dependent users.

Maybe the authors should have mentioned that most people who want to use drugs, do so already, regardless of the law. Saying that we should be concerned that decriminalisation raises the risk of dependant users increasing their consumption is odd when the next line states that treatment more effective than punishment. Sure, decriminalisation without increased treatment is probably a waste of time but why would any government leave out this important part?

The fact is, there is no evidence to suggest that removing or lowering penalties for drugs will increase drug use. The opposite is true. All the evidence points towards less drug use and more users seeking treatment.

If the state provided drugs to dependent users, the black market for drugs would collapse, thereby reducing if not eliminating drug-related crime
The main problem with this argument is that if the state did succeed in meeting a large portion of the demand for illicit drugs like heroin, the price of drugs on the black market could fall. This may encourage more people into the illicit drug market.

A second problem is that some drugs (such as amphetamines) have quite toxic mental health effects if used regularly. The state cannot be expected to offer toxic drugs to people just to avoid creating a black market.

A third problem is that medicalising a problem does not necessarily reduce crime and corruption. Witness the problems we are having with pharmaceutical opioids, such as oxycodone.

I am surprised that someone with as much knowledge as Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall, have come up with these over simplified answers. This is the problem with most of the opposition to drug law reform - single solution responses. Legalising drugs does not mean selling heroin at the local 7-11 store. It would enable cheap, quality illicit drugs to be purchased safely from pharmacies with a prescription from a doctor. A black market would find it almost impossible to compete on price or quality. Anyone wanting drugs can do so with a visit to a doctor, removing most incentives for black market drug dealers. Since we already know that most people who want to use drugs already do so, there would be very little increase in new drug users. Also, drugs would become boring to our youth when the mystique is taken away. Like in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Germany - prescription heroin has changed the image of heroin to an old person’s drug. Seeing middle aged people line up for their daily shots at Heroin Assisted Treatment (HAT) clinics is not very sexy nor alluring to rebellious youth. Not only do these countries now have very low rates of new users but there are also fewer heroin dealers to get them started. 

Weatherburn and Hall argue that medicalising a problem does not necessarily reduce crime and corruption. This is part of the argument opposing legalisation because legal pharmaceuticals like Xanax, oxycondone, morphine etc. also have a huge black market as illicit drugs do. The glaring flaw is that these pharmaceuticals cannot be prescribed for addicts or recreational use. A better comparison would be alcohol as I am yet to hear about pubs fighting it out in the streets with guns for their share of the market. 

The other point raised by Weatherburn and Hall is that “some drugs (such as amphetamines) have quite toxic mental health effects if used regularly. and ”The state cannot be expected to offer toxic drugs to people just to avoid creating a black market”. The main drug of addiction - heroin - is non toxic and can be taken safely for decades. But that’s not the point. Users are taking these drugs anyway, which are almost always cut with contaminants. Swapping dirty street drugs with pharmaceutical quality drugs is a no-brainer. Feeling guilty is not an excuse to keep people using unregulated, contaminated chemicals when a clean alternative exists. The hard truth is, some people will use drugs regardless of the potential harms or the law. Weatherburn and Hall try to make this a moral issue where giving illicit drugs to existing users is somehow worse than sitting by and watching them hurt themselves by their own accord. 

But the strangest claim is that providing drugs to existing users is worse than the huge black market that prohibition has created. This is not science but the usual anti-drug rhetoric we should not expect from experts. How did they concluded that simply giving users a clean batch of what they would consume anyway is worse than the millions of people who have their lives ruined every year? Or the thousands who die or are injured from drug gang violence. Or the massive drug fighting budgets that could be used to wipe out global poverty? Or the hundreds of thousands who are incarcerated each year? 

Every kilo of illegal drugs we seize is one less on the streets
The problem with this argument is that drug traffickers can often make up for any losses they suffer by importing or supplying replacement drugs. The cost of seizures, moreover, is a lot less for them than it appears.

Police routinely state the value of drugs they seize in terms of their retail - street - cost as if this were the financial loss to the importer and distributor. But the cost of importing and distributing drugs is far less than the cost of consuming them. The effect of a drug seizure on the importer or the distributor's profit margin, therefore, is less than it appears. The profits for drug importers and distributors when they avoid detection are potentially huge.

They are correct on this point but should have gone further. With so much money being poured into customs, boarder protection and the policing of drugs, the authorities need to appear they paying their way. How often do we see or hear about some drug bust, often with pictures of the police in front of their prized stockpile of confiscated contraband? And how often do we hear that this bust will make a dent in the drug market. According to the police themselves, we only stop about 10-15% of all the drugs illegally entering Australia. Apart from raising the obvious issue about how futile this all seems, we have to wonder how they actually know it’s only 10-15%.

Treatment is more effective than drug law enforcement in reducing demand for illicit drugs.
This is perhaps the most misleading of all the arguments put forward about illicit drug policy.

It's a sad fact that many dependent drug users only seek treatment when the personal and financial cost of continued drug use gets too high. The financial cost is attributable in large part to prohibition. The personal cost includes trouble with police and the courts, which is one of the most commonly cited reasons for entering treatment. Coercing drug-dependent offenders into treatment is known to be effective in reducing drug use and drug-related crime.

What are the authors saying? It appears that they applaud the carnage caused by prohibition because it encourages users to seek treatment. Ruining people’s lives is a harsh way to help those with a drug problem and frankly, it’s disturbing that the authors don’t condemn it. They know better than anyone that coercing addicts into treatment might help some in the short term but unless they’re ready to give up drugs, it is a pointless exercise. The damage to people’s lives is one of the main arguments against our punitive drug laws. The big question is, why do we allow the lives of addicts to fall apart so they can be coerced into treatment?

Here is a quote from an earlier point made in the article, “Treatment, however, is almost certainly more effective than punishment in reducing drug consumption among dependent users”. Confused? To apply prohibition, you have to have a system involving punishment. But what if we took away the penalties (and the black market) where drug users could go through the addiction process under the supervision of medical experts? We could avoid the bulk of problems associated with drug use … the effects of prohibition.


The Move to the Mainstream
Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall are not the only experts who seem to have softened their opposition to current drug policies. Over the years, there has been several cases of groups or individuals swapping their beliefs in evidence based science for a more government friendly, anti-drug approach. This is disappointing as more and more people realise the futility of our drug policies.

Australia’s official research group into drug use, the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC) was established at the University of New South Wales in May, 1986 and officially opened in November, 1987. It is funded by the Australian Government as part of the National Drug Strategy. Surprisingly, they were void of the government’s usual anti-drug rhetoric and if anything, gave plenty of evidence on why we should change our drug laws. But in 2007, the government expand NDARC with the dubious National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre (NCPIC). Instead of following the strictly evidence only attitude of NDARC, NCPIC was headed up by a well known anti-cannabis zealot and returned us to the good old days of scare campaigns a.k.a. reefer madness. NCPIC is supposed to be an evidence based group like it’s sister-group, NDARC but including the word, prevention in it’s title must ring a few warning bells in the science community.

Another major worry is the appointment of NCPIC’s National Communications Manager, Paul Dillion. As the Media Liaison/Information Manager for NDARC, Paul was once known for his balanced views on our drug situation and his attacks on the media for their disgraceful reporting of drug issues. That seems to have been replaced with some sort of loyalty to pushing NCPIC’s agenda.

Although The Greens are not technically experts on drugs, they were one of the few political parties who supported an evidence based drug policy. While other parties might have mentioned evidence as part of their policies, The Greens actually modelled their drug policy on science, research and real evidence. Unfortunately, The Greens succumbed to the pressure involved in becoming a major political party and watered down their drug policy. Sadly, any political party wanting to be popular has to bow to public ignorance on drug related issues.

The same has happened in the UK where a coalition of conservative and progressive parties has seen The Liberal Democrats support a push for abstinence based treatment to replace substitution programs like methadone and the removal of welfare for drug addicts. Almost a complete polar position of their evidence based drug policy before they formed government.

It’s disappointing that in 2010, we are still pushing drug policies that wreak so much carnage although we now have decades of proof to show us our mistakes. But it’s even more disappointing that experts like Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall are prepared to overturn their once logical assumptions for weak but popular views.

To read more analyse about the article in the Sydney Morning Herald, check out The Kings Cross Times.


Beating The Drug Trade Isn't About Black-And-White Solutions
By Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall
September 2010

A combination of law enforcement and treatment is the key, write Don Weatherburn and Wayne Hall.

No sooner do signs emerge of another drug problem than we hear predictable calls to treat illicit drug use as a health rather than a crime problem. These calls mirror the rhetoric from supporters of an all-out war on illicit drug use.

Neither side in this debate sees any merit in its opponents' arguments. Both sides try to persuade you that we face a stark choice between investment in treatment and harm reduction or, on the other hand, prohibition and drug law enforcement.

Let's critically assess five of the arguments often put forward by both sides in this debate.

Argument number one is that the war on drugs has failed because it's still easy to obtain illegal drugs. This is like arguing that the laws against drink driving have failed because thousands of people each year continue to drink and drive.

The purpose of drug law enforcement is not to make illicit drugs impossible to obtain. The primary justification for prohibition (and the enforcement activity that underpins it) is that it keeps illicit drug prices much higher than they would otherwise be. This, in turn, keeps illicit drug consumption and drug-related harm lower than they would otherwise be. The heroin shortage in 2000 showed us that higher drug prices do reduce levels of drug-related crime, morbidity and mortality. We ought, therefore, to be wary of any policy that reduces the cost of illegal drugs.

Argument number two is that if we legalise drug use and possession, more people will use illicit drugs. This argument sounds plausible because most people won't do something they know to be illegal.

However, the fact is that most studies of drug use decriminalisation find it has little effect on the prevalence of illicit drug use, except where the state turns a blind eye to drug supply (as happened a few years ago in the Netherlands).

There is a risk that decriminalising illicit drug use will increase consumption among existing dependent users. Since they account for most of the harm associated with illicit drug use, this is a matter for concern. Treatment, however, is almost certainly more effective than punishment in reducing drug consumption among dependent users.

Argument number three is that if the state provided drugs to dependent users, the black market for drugs would collapse, thereby reducing if not eliminating drug-related crime. The main problem with this argument is that if the state did succeed in meeting a large portion of the demand for illicit drugs like heroin, the price of drugs on the black market could fall. This may encourage more people into the illicit drug market.

A second problem is that some drugs (such as amphetamines) have quite toxic mental health effects if used regularly. The state cannot be expected to offer toxic drugs to people just to avoid creating a black market.

A third problem is that medicalising a problem does not necessarily reduce crime and corruption. Witness the problems we are having with pharmaceutical opioids, such as oxycodone.

Argument number four is that every kilo of illegal drugs we seize is one less on the streets. The problem with this argument is that drug traffickers can often make up for any losses they suffer by importing or supplying replacement drugs. The cost of seizures, moreover, is a lot less for them than it appears.

Police routinely state the value of drugs they seize in terms of their retail - street - cost as if this were the financial loss to the importer and distributor. But the cost of importing and distributing drugs is far less than the cost of consuming them. The effect of a drug seizure on the importer or the distributor's profit margin, therefore, is less than it appears. The profits for drug importers and distributors when they avoid detection are potentially huge.

Argument number five is that treatment is more effective than drug law enforcement in reducing demand for illicit drugs. This is perhaps the most misleading of all the arguments put forward about illicit drug policy.

It's a sad fact that many dependent drug users only seek treatment when the personal and financial cost of continued drug use gets too high. The financial cost is attributable in large part to prohibition. The personal cost includes trouble with police and the courts, which is one of the most commonly cited reasons for entering treatment. Coercing drug-dependent offenders into treatment is known to be effective in reducing drug use and drug-related crime.

We don't have to choose between treatment and drug law enforcement. We can and should support both.

Dr Don Weatherburn is director of the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research and Professor Wayne Hall is the National Health and Medical Research Council Australia Fellow at the University of Queensland.

Sunday 5 September 2010

Gateway Theory Debunked … Again!

New research finds little support for the hypothesis that marijuana is a "gateway" drug leading to the use of harder drugs in adulthood.

You have to feel sorry for people who have learning difficulties. Especially those who bang on and on and on about cannabis being a “gateway” to harder drugs.

It seems that no amount of evidence will stop over zealous, dip-shit anti-drug pundits from spreading their lies and propaganda. Not even those pesky scientists who keep proving them wrong, will keep them quiet.

I wonder what their response will be to the latest study by researchers at the University of New Hampshire who once again disproved “The Gateway Theory”? Somehow I doubt if we will hear much about it. When was the last time you heard a politician or anti-drug group declare they were wrong or the “The Gateway Theory” is obsolete? When was the last time you read about it in the mainstream media?

So, why do they persist? Most people or groups who constantly reject medical research and scientific evidence are usually just written off as nutters but some of these zealots will go to great lengths in a desperate attempt to push their disingenuous cause. Even to the point of using junk science. For example:

In contrast, the US Office of National Drug Control Policy’s “2008 Marijuana Sourcebook” clearly states that recent research supports the gateway hypothesis, specifically that “its use creates greater risk of abuse or dependency on other drugs, such as heroin and cocaine”.

Of course, the US Office of National Drug Control Policy aka The Drug Czar is notorious for dishing up government sponsored propaganda. Remember, this is the group that manages the "War on Drugs" for the US and the UN. Maybe if they spent more time reading up on the available scientific evidence instead of sifting through volumes of anti-drug propaganda they would come to a different conclusion. Nah, who am I kidding?

It is hard to keep the same attitudes to cannabis prohibition when Obama and the two previous US Presidents are known to have smoked cannabis. Perhaps cannabis is a gateway drug after all * the drug that young Americans have to try if they want to become President of the USA.

Ironically, there is some truth about cannabis leading to harder drugs but not for the reasons quoted by the gateway theory supporters. It’s actually the policies pushed by these supporters that are to blame. Simply smoking cannabis doesn’t make someone automatically want something stronger or harder. It’s the association with drug dealers that smokers are forced to endure because of our strict drug laws. Some of these dealers will undoubtedly sell harder drugs, giving way to pressure to try another drug. Pot smokers are forced underground where all drug users are grouped together by a society that doesn’t separate soft drugs from hard drugs. Most pot smokers never go on to harder drugs nor do they want to but being forced underground with addicts, criminals and speed dealers exposes them to a world that they normally wouldn’t encounter.


Teen Pot Smoking Won't Lead to Other Drugs as Adults
Study Shows Marijuana Isn't a 'Gateway' to Other Drugs as Teens Turn Into Adults
By Salynn Boyles. Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD
September 2010

New research finds little support for the hypothesis that marijuana is a "gateway" drug leading to the use of harder drugs in adulthood.

Teens in the study who smoked marijuana were more likely to go on to use harder illicit drugs, but the gateway effect was lessened by the age of 21, investigators say.

Harder drugs in the study referred to illicit drugs that include analgesics, cocaine, hallucinogens, heroin, inhalants, sedatives, stimulants, and tranquilizers.

The study is published in the September issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.

Failure to graduate from high school or find a job were all bigger predictors of drug use in young adulthood than marijuana use during adolescence, says study researcher Karen Van Gundy, who is a sociologist at the University of New Hampshire.

She adds that the findings have implications for policymakers on the front lines in the war on drugs.

"If we overly criminalize behaviors like marijuana use among teens, this could interfere with opportunities for education and employment later on, which, in turn, could be creating more drug use," she tells WebMD.

Marijuana's Gateway Effect Goes Away
Van Gundy says she did not set out to disprove the idea that marijuana is a gateway drug when she and co-researcher Cesar J. Rebellon examined survey data from 1,300 mostly male Hispanic, white, and African-American young adults who attended south Florida public schools in the 1990s. The participants were followed from enrollment in the sixth or seventh grade until they reached their late teens or early 20s.

"Most of the previous research has examined early drug use among people with serious drug problems," she says. "These people do tend to progress from alcohol and marijuana use to other drugs."

When the teens in the study were followed forward into young adulthood, however, a different picture emerged.

"We were somewhat surprised to find the gateway effect wasn't that strong during the transition to adulthood," Van Gundy says. "It really didn't matter if someone used marijuana or not as a teen."

Specifically, the study found illicit drug abuse in young adulthood to be much more closely linked to stress during the teen years and whether or not the young adults were employed.

"Assuming and occupying conventional roles, such as 'worker,' may close the marijuana gateway by modifying and redirecting substance use trajectories," the researchers write.

The Fight Against Drugs
The findings suggest anti-drug efforts aimed at keeping kids in school and providing employment opportunities may have the biggest positive impact on drug use in adulthood, Van Gundy says.

Urban sociologist and drug-use researcher Lesley Reid agrees.

An associate professor of sociology at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Reid's research has focused on the gateway effect of so-called club drugs like ecstasy and cocaine among heavy drug users in their 20s.

She says most of these heavy users do start with alcohol and marijuana and progress to harder drugs.

"Obviously, we don't see this age effect among these heavy users," she tells WebMD. "But in the general population most people do outgrow behaviors like drug use and other delinquent behaviors."

'Gateway' Pioneer Critical of Study
But Columbia University sociologist Denise B. Kandel, PhD, whose research early in the decade found marijuana to be a gateway drug, calls the new research highly flawed and the conclusions "ill founded."

She tells WebMD that the design of the study did not allow the researchers to properly test the hypothesis that marijuana is a gateway drug.

Kandel does not disagree with the conclusion that social position in young adulthood plays a big role in drug use during this time. But she says the researchers fail to consider the potential impact of early marijuana use on social position.

"Using marijuana as a teen can certainly have an impact on whether or not someone fails to graduate from high school or gets a job," she says. "And this increases the risk of persistent illicit drug use."


Supporters of “The Gateway Theory”
With all the readily available evidence to debunk “The Gateway Theory”, you would think that only crackpots like Drug Free Australia (DFA) would keep pushing this farce. But this is the scary part - many officials funded by the public purse continue to cite “The Gateway Theory” as a fact. How can police ministers, police chiefs, politicians etc. continue this lie when our very own National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre (NCPIC) don’t support it? NCPIC aren’t exactly without bias themselves but at least they acknowledge that “The Gateway Theory” is dubious at best.

Most people who use illegal drugs, like heroin or amphetamine, first used drugs like alcohol, tobacco or cannabis. These substances, but most usually cannabis, are seen as a 'gateway' to the use of other, more dangerous drugs. However, the vast majority of people who do use cigarettes, alcohol or cannabis never use other illicit drugs. For example, while the majority of heroin users have used cannabis, only around 4% of cannabis users have used heroin.

Below is a collection of quotes from people or groups who support the “gateway” myth. You may notice that most of them are paid by you via your taxes.

This paper seeks to provide an introduction to the available literature on cannabis and the issues arising from cannabis use today, including: a description of the drug and its use; the increased potency of cannabis in the market; cannabis as a “gateway” to harder drug use; the issues of dependence and withdrawal; the significant cannabis harms on mental health, brain function and development, and physical conditions such as cancer; and, the problems encountered when trying to quit cannabis and the generally poor outcomes today.

It does cause psychosis, it does destroy families and it is a gateway drug to heavier use.

For many young people, cannabis can be used as a ‘gateway’ drug into more dangerous illicit drugs, with most heroin and cocaine users first experimenting with cannabis and research showing regular cannabis users are 140 times more likely to advance to stronger drugs than people who had not tried cannabis.

Amongst drug users, cannabis is very widely recognised as having been their gateway drug into heavier drugs.

Research continues to show that cannabis can lead to a host of health and mental health problems including schizophrenia, and can be a gateway to harder drugs

Those of us who have worked in the field for many years know that marijuana is a 'gateway drug'
--Brian Watters. Salvation Army

I look forward to the next session of Parliament, because then I will not have to listen to the hypocrisy of the Hon. Richard Jones in continuing to berate tobacco use while condoning the use of the world's greatest gateway drug, marijuana.
--Malcolm Jones MP (Dec 2002)

Marijuana is a gateway drug

Ample research continues to show that cannabis can lead to a host of health and mental health problems including schizophrenia and can be a gateway to harder drugs

That was not considered to be the case 30 years ago, but now it has been proven that cannabis is a gateway drug.

Targeting cannabis use as the first drug in the chain towards drug abuse (based on the ‘gateway’ theory) was also identified as a key element.

Moreover, marijuana is a “gateway” drug

Cannabis has been known and identified as a gateway drug, leading to the use of more and stronger drugs to get a greater kick

The report refers to cannabis as a gateway drug—
[…]
The long-term impact will be the use of other, stronger, quicker and equally destructive drugs such as heroin, amphetamines and ecstasy.

This has a lifelong impact on their families, it has an impact on crimes that are committed as illicit drugs are used, especially where it is a gateway drug, and it has an impact because of the sheer cost involved in caring for someone with schizophrenia through their life.

Cannabis is also known to be a gateway drug. Multiple studies have shown that the use of cannabis on an ongoing basis creates the risk of abuse of other drugs, such as heroin and cocaine.

About 40 per cent think cannabis is always addictive, and one in five said it is always a gateway to harder drugs. 

The other obvious argument is that in America, 80 per cent of marijuana users go on to using cocaine. So it is clearly a gateway drug.


Related Articles

Tuesday 16 December 2008

Cannabis is a Hard Drug Too! - More DFA Deceit

Here is just another in a long line of farcical positions held by Drug Free Australia (DFA). Their arguments are thin, their science is junk and their evidence is cherry picked from millions of pages of research. DFA are notorious for producing misinformation and twisting facts. This article is a another example.

CANNABIS is a Hard Drug Too! 
Spring 2008 

Why is cannabis still separated out from the so-called ‘hard drugs’ in Australian statistical data, given that we now have strong evidence of its devastating harms?

In countries such as Sweden, which has the lowest illicit drug use in the OECD, cannabis has NEVER been considered ‘soft’. In the UK it has just been re-classified up to a Class B drug – sending a strong message to their community that this drug is definitely NOT soft!

However, the situation may be about to change in Australia. The establishment of the innovative new cannabis research centre (NCPIC) is certainly a step in the right direction. Drug Free Australia welcomed the excellent address given by the Federal Minister for Health and Ageing, Nicola Roxon, when she opened the Centre earlier this year.

She, along with Professor Alan Budney, a specialist in the field, both emphasised the complexities and harms of cannabis. We were further heartened by meetings with two Federal Ministerial Advisers, both of whom assured us a preventative approach to illicit drug policy is being taken seriously by Labor.

The most recent, compelling evidence cannot be disregarded. For instance, the Australian Medical Association has issued warnings on the health risks associated with smoking marijuana. Risks of cannabis use include memory loss, psychosis, impaired driving, hallucinations, asthma, and even lung cancer. Moreover, warns the AMA, one third to one half of detained patients admitted to psychiatric units in Australia are there because marijuana use has precipitated their condition. A new scientific study conducted in New Zealand indicates that long term cannabis use increases the risk of lung cancer in young adults. The study recognised that cannabis smoke has been shown to have greater concentrations of carcinogenic hydrocarbons than tobacco.

Many national and international studies have found that drivers intoxicated with cannabis, pose a high risk of road accidents. For example a 10 year Victorian study found a 7 times greater risk of a fatal accident. Other studies clearly show that cannabis impairs vehicle control, including the ability to stay in one lane, as well as slowing reaction time. (ANCD Report, Dec 2004).

Highly respected medical practitioners in Australia and overseas have confirmed that cannabis use is linked to psychosis. Dr Brian Boettcher, Consulting Psychiatrist in the UK reports that ‘Cannabis is capable of precipitating psychosis, going on to the chronic cases in people who have had no family and personal history of psychiatric illness. There have been suggestions that such people may be the ones who have started cannabis in their teens’.

So far as cannabis use and birth defects is concerned, a Commonwealth Department of Health publication to medical practitioners warns of foetal brain development, relative prematurity, smaller length and head circumference, malformations, higher rate of miscarriage and perinatal death. A US study found a 10 times greater risk of non- lymphoblastic cancer to infants of marijuana- using mothers. Other effects in the new born are lethargy, slow to gain weight, increased startle reflexes, tremors and possible long- term developmental and behavioural effects. All of this clearly points to the fact that cannabis should be considered at least as serious as other ‘hard’ drugs such as heroin or methamphetamines.

I have watched almost daily as Jo Baxter and Gary Christian contribute their special brand of drug propaganda to the Australian National Council on Drugs (ANCD) email forums, DrugTalk and Update. I have also recently watched many members unsubscribe as the content quality is reduced by these people. 

Maybe it’s the posts from Jo Baxter using comments from the religious, anti-drug zealots, Drug Advisory Council of Australia Inc.(DACA) as some sort of authority or Gary Christian bombarding every topic with multiple emails and his never ending focus shifts when he hits a wall of expertise. 

Just today on the radio, I heard Jo Baxter suddenly switch topics from prescription heroin to openly legalising heroin in an attempt to mislead the listeners. She was defending her position on a possible heroin trial in Australia and when asked to respond to Dr. Alex Wodak’s suggestion for such a trial said that legalising heroin would be a mistake. Instead of responding to why prescription heroin wouldn’t work for long term addicts, she simply said legalising heroin sends the wrong message. 

This is standard stuff for DFA to change the focus of the debate with the intention to misrepresent what their opponents are really talking about. In their tiny little world there is no middle ground. Prescription heroin equals free for all drug legalisation, Harm Minimisation equals encouraging people to use drugs, decriminalisation equals legalisation, human rights for addicts equals moral decay. 

To be fair, I need to clarify my position first. I detest DFA and consider them probably the most dangerous organisation in Australia. Their polices are crude and harsh, cruel and non compassionate, unscientific and unrealistic, based on proven failures and unsuccessful strategies, full of religious rhetoric and fundamentalism, are founded on misapprehension and mythos, sly and disingenuous and basically unworkable. DFA tactics include misinformation and propaganda, arrogance and bullying, political manoeuvring and opportunity, exaggeration and guesswork, lies and deceit and especially misleading the public and government. 

Most of the DFA board/fellows are affiliated with religious groups. These include the Salvation Army and the Catholic Church and also radical evangelists like The Festival of Light, Seventh Day Adventists, Australian Family Association and even Scientology. 

Many have been part of abstinence only programs that reject Harm Minimisation like Tough Love, Drug Stop, Parents for Drug Free Youth. They have affiliation with shady groups like Southern Cross Bioethics Institute, Wilderness Therapy, Drug Free America Foundation and Knights of the Southern Cross. 

The patron is a TV evangelist who performs magic tricks on stage like curing the sick. She claims god works through her to heal the crippled or cancer sufferers. I have decided to dissect their article and seek out the actual facts. Not surprisingly it wasn’t hard. The content of the article is in red

CANNABIS is a Hard Drug Too! Why is cannabis still separated out from the so-called ‘hard drugs’ in Australian statistical data, given that we now have strong evidence of its devastating harms?

Because it’s not a hard drug. Don’t take my word for it, look to the world trend that is decriminalising cannabis at a rapid rate. 

The main reason given for decriminalisation is the separation of hard drugs from soft drugs. You are probably now asking yourself, isn’t this what the whole article is about? And you are dead right, which makes DFA dead wrong. The many countries who have or are considering classing cannabis as a soft drug have obviously researched the issue rigourously so why are DFA taking the opposite view? This is exactly my point and one of the clearest examples of why DFA has little or no credibility. Cannabis has never killed anyone, no-one has ever overdosed from it and it doesn’t cause devastating harm as DFA claims. This doesn’t mean it’s harmless but cannabis is many times safer than legal drugs like tobacco and alcohol. In moderation, there’s debate whether it’s even harmful at all but like any drug, excessive use may cause problems. 

In countries such as Sweden, which has the lowest illicit drug use in the OECD, cannabis has NEVER been considered ‘soft’. In the UK it has just been re-classified up to a Class B drug – sending a strong message to their community that this drug is definitely NOT soft!
Sweden is often used as the success story of a Zero Tolerance drug policy but there is a good reason for this. Other countries with Zero Tolerance policies like the US show that the policy has no effect whatsoever on rates of drug use. 

The US for example has the highest rate of drug use on the planet although it has similar strategies like Sweden including the classing of cannabis as a hard drug. Sweden is selectively singled out because it has always had a relatively low rate of drug use including alcohol. The Swedes are just not regular users of drugs in comparison to most countries. The statement from DFA that cannabis has been re-classified to a class B drug in the UK only claims it’s sending a message that cannabis is not a soft drug. This is not evidence that cannabis is a hard drug at all but merely political posturing. The UK government decided to raise the classification of cannabis against all recommendations from experts, the police, their own party and even a special enquiry commissioned by themselves. The enquiry report from a few years prior had suggested to lower the classification to the lowest class of C, which they did and cannabis use then dropped as a result. Move forward a few years to 2008 and the government has a new unpopular leader. In a politically motivated stunt, the lower use rates were somehow completely overlooked and cannabis was again raised to a class B drug. So much for evidence based policies when your popularity is at stake.

However, the situation may be about to change in Australia. The establishment of the innovative new cannabis research centre (NCPIC) is certainly a step in the right direction. Drug Free Australia welcomed the excellent address given by the Federal Minister for Health and Ageing, Nicola Roxon, when she opened the Centre earlier this year. She, along with Professor Alan Budney, a specialist in the field, both emphasised the complexities and harms of cannabis. We were further heartened by meetings with two Federal Ministerial Advisers, both of whom assured us a preventative approach to illicit drug policy is being taken seriously by Labor.

The National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre (NCPIC) is being bandied about a lot by anti-drug groups. They are also receiving much criticism for being another propaganda machine. Michael Gormly, editor of Kings Cross Times gives an example in his article titled, NCPIC spouts more junk science

Funnily, Jan Copeland, the head of NCPIC recently slipped up and admitted publicly that most cannabis smokers DO NOT have problems. I wonder who the two Federal Ministerial Advisers were that met with DFA? Apparently DFA were not important enough to be welcomed by Nicola Roxon (Federal Minister for Health and Ageing), Jenny Macklin (the Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs) or Jan McLucas (Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Health and Ageing). 

I did a search for DFA on the website for Health and Ageing and only found one reference to them in a one line comment regarding amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS). All other instances of DFA were for Direct Fluorescence Assay or diseases like Syphilis. So much for being noticed by the government. 

DFA do a good job of telling us they are a peak body NGO and often suggest they are part of the Australia’s strategy on illicit drugs. They make a lot of fuss about their influence on the government including their demand that Australia’s political parties come clean on their support of being “tough on drugs”. They were mostly ignored with their demand except by the Libs who coincidentally approved funding for DFA when in government. For a “Peak Body”, the have surprisingly little support from professionals. 

Looking through the websites of official organisations that deal with illicit drugs, I am yet to find support for DFA. The only links to DFA seem to be from similar groups who are also ignored by the professionals. 

Their biggest claim to fame and the source for much of their delusion is being prominent contributors to the The Bishop Report: “The Winnable War on Drugs”. This report was the result of the most loaded enquiry ever held in Australia and although it’s been written off by most experts worldwide and completely ignored by the current government, DFA still promote it as the answer to our drug problem. Apart from like minded groups, they are seen for what they are - a bunch of radical religious weirdoes who care not for addicts but their own personal ideology. 

The most recent, compelling evidence cannot be disregarded. For instance, the Australian Medical Association has issued warnings on the health risks associated with smoking marijuana. 
Risks of cannabis use include memory loss, psychosis, impaired driving, hallucinations, asthma, and even lung cancer. Moreover, warns the AMA, one third to one half of detained patients admitted to psychiatric units in Australia are there because marijuana use has precipitated their condition. 
A new scientific study conducted in New Zealand indicates that long term cannabis use increases the risk of lung cancer in young adults. The study recognised that cannabis smoke has been shown to have greater concentrations of carcinogenic hydrocarbons than tobacco.

The evidence might appear compelling but it is not fact. Only a tiny percentage ever have problems with cannabis and this is mostly confined to heavy users. Any sensible person would agree that abusing any drug increases the risks of harm. 

Most anti-drug campaigns including tobacco, focus on the extreme examples of what may occur if used excessively over many years. Nearly all illicit drugs have very little effect on the user unless abused. Heroin for example is basically non toxic and has almost no physical effects. The same is for cannabis. 

You may notice that half the list of possible harms are easily avoidable through common sense but they always seem to be included as additional scare tactics. For example, impaired driving is a no brainer. If drinkers can avoid driving when intoxicated why wouldn’t cannabis users do the same? Someone under the effects of cannabis is much more likely not to drive than alcohol affected persons but this is never mentioned. 

What about asthma or lung cancer? Do asthma sufferers smoke cigarettes? Do cigarette smokers continue if they start to get asthma? The difference with cannabis is that it can consumed by other methods apart from smoking. It seems that cannabis users again have been targeted as lacking common sense. Users with respiratory problems can include cannabis in food or use the many vaporisers available on the market. Cannabis may have greater concentrations of carcinogenic hydrocarbons than tobacco but the process of intake is completely different. Cigarette smokers inhale all day whilst cannabis users only take what they need to. Smoking 20 cigarettes a day with 10-20 puffs is vastly different to 1-4 puffs per day or week. Research on inhaling burnt plant matter shows that the body can natural accommodate a certain amount of fumes without any effect. It varies from person to person but if say 10% is harmless then 40 puffs on a cigarette being 10% of a daily total of 400 is significantly more than say 4 puffs for cannabis. It again comes down to use versus abuse. That being said, anyone who has 40 puffs of cannabis a day, every day probably needs help. 

On a side issue, since prohibition makes cannabis expensive, users often mix in tobacco to maximise their stash or control the intake potency. There is some suggestions now that a lot of craving to take cannabis is the really the desire for nicotine, not cannabis. Cannabis is classed as a very mildly dependant drug like caffeine but tobacco is classed as extremely addictive like heroin. 

Many national and international studies have found that drivers intoxicated with cannabis, pose a high risk of road accidents. For example a 10 year Victorian study found a 7 times greater risk of a fatal accident. Other studies clearly show that cannabis impairs vehicle control, including the ability to stay in one lane, as well as slowing reaction time. (ANCD Report, Dec 2004).

Ah, again the assumption that all cannabis users are completely irresponsible. No one should drive with any mind altering substance including alcohol or prescription drugs. Why would cannabis smokers be different from alcohol drinkers? You may start to see the tactics used by DFA a little clearer now.

Highly respected medical practitioners in Australia and overseas have confirmed that cannabis use is linked to psychosis. Dr Brian Boettcher, Consulting Psychiatrist in the UK reports that ‘Cannabis is capable of precipitating psychosis, going on to the chronic cases in people who have had no family and personal history of psychiatric illness. There have been suggestions that such people may be the ones who have started cannabis in their teens’.

The main medical argument by groups like DFA is the claim that it leads to psychosis. What is known is that people with a history of metal illness in their family may be prone to similar symptoms. The big question is whether those who smoke cannabis without a generic link to metal health have a greater chance of suffering psychosis than those who do not use cannabis. Again moderation is the key. Heavy use of cannabis may cause psychotic conditions but does moderate use? This has never been conclusive. DFA cite a quote from a report by Dr Brian Boettcher. What they leave out from his report is:

The drug induced psychosis seen when Cannabis is the main substance being abused is distinct phenomenologically from other psychosis. It is unusual for such a psychosis to occur without other drugs being involved to some extent and so it is difficult to tease out the differences between the effects of Cannabis and other drugs. -Dr Brian Boettcher
Then a few years later, Reuters wrote an article about a report from Dr. Mikkel Arendt of Aarhus University in Risskov, Denmark:
They found that individuals treated for post-pot smoking psychotic episodes had the same likelihood of having a mother, sister or other "first-degree" relative with schizophrenia as did the individuals who had actually been treated for schizophrenia themselves. This suggests that cannabis-induced psychosis and schizophrenia are one and the same, the researchers note. "These people would have developed schizophrenia whether or not they used cannabis" Based on the findings, the researcher says, "cannabis-induced psychosis is probably not a valid diagnosis. It should be considered schizophrenia." 

This brings up a very important point.
It's "very common" for people to have psychotic symptoms after using marijuana, such as hearing voices, feeling paranoid, or believing one has some type of special ability, Arendt said. But these symptoms typically last only an hour or two. "It's a very important distinction, this 48 hours criterion," he said. 

So it still seems there is still no conclusive link to psychosis from moderate cannabis use. The psychotic symptoms are just that, symptoms or psychotic conditions not psychosis itself. Like a drinker who becomes violent or depressed when drinking, a cannabis users who suffers adverse effects should probably abstain. DFA again assumes cannabis users are incapable of controlling their use. Any normal person who has negative effects like psychotic type symptoms from taking something will most probably avoid it. 

The very reason I don’t smoke cannabis is because it has an adverse effect on me. I get paranoid and stay extra quiet until the effect wears off. I know many people like this who simply don’t take alcohol or other drugs that have unpleasant effects. So why do DFA suggest cannabis users will continue down a self destructive path as opposed to most drinkers? 

Many of the reports that suggest cannabis does cause psychosis are statistical witch hunts that process millions of possibilities until they find a result they are looking for. This is known as junk science and is well known throughout the research world. The often used “gateway theory” where cannabis leads to harder drug use is an example of this. Because X once used Y and now has psychosis then X must be a precursor for psychosis. Using their logic, alcohol and tobacco have more chance of being a precursor for psychosis than cannabis. In other words, certain groups seek out particular results to add credibility to their often tenuous agenda. DFA is one of these groups.

Norman Swan: And how often, you talk about bias and statistical bias in the reporting, to what extent do you see the statistics manipulated in order to get a positive result? 
Dr. John Ioannidis: Well one does not necessarily need any manipulation. Let's say that someone does the perfect study, the perfect epidemiological study, the perfect exploratory analysis hunting for associations. However there are ten other teams that do equally perfect studies and only one is lucky just because of chance to find some particular association with some exposure or intervention of interest. Now if we had the benefit of reporting the results of all ten, or eleven investigations with equal weight and equally soon and in equal detail then we would not be misled, we would see that here are ten studies that find nothing, and there's one that's found something but if you pull them together you see that there's absolutely no effect, nothing to be seen, so it's just statistical rules that say if you run too many studies and too many analyses a few of them will show something that is just chance. However in the current publication environment researchers are really urged to report that they have made discoveries, competition is very fierce, they have to say that we have found something and they probably don't have much time or even willingness to report and comment on what 'negative results', even though these studies may be just as important and as well conducted. So what we end up seeing many times is just the tip of the significant results that appear due to chance. 

The facts are clear. 
  • Most users of cannabis will NOT become psychotic.
  • Those with a history of mental illness in their family including themselves have a greater chance of psychosis.
  • Some of the negative effects of cannabis abuse appear as symptoms of psychosis but only last for an hour or two.
  • Cannabis use may be damaging to the young brains of teenagers.
There’s a lot of maybes in cannabis research but the fact is most users have no problems whatsoever. The small group who are prone to abuse cannabis or have adverse effects should not use it. It's simple really and I fail to see why DFA do not ever mention this. Instead, DFA are well known to cherry pick their data and write their own biased conclusions. Paul Gallagher from DFA Watch gives an excellent example in the article, Drug Free Australia; telling you what you think.

So far as cannabis use and birth defects is concerned, a Commonwealth Department of Health publication to medical practitioners warns of foetal brain development, relative prematurity, smaller length and head circumference, malformations, higher rate of miscarriage and perinatal death. A US study found a 10 times greater risk of non- lymphoblastic cancer to infants of marijuana- using mothers. 
Other effects in the new born are lethargy, slow to gain weight, increased startle reflexes, tremors and possible long- term developmental and behavioural effects. All of this clearly points to the fact that cannabis should be considered at least as serious as other ‘hard’ drugs such as heroin or methamphetamines.

No one should take potentially harmful drugs whilst pregnant including alcohol, cannabis or prescription drugs! Again, a no brainer. I keep asking this question ... why do DFA assume cannabis users can’t control themselves? Any normal person would not risk hurting their unborn child and this includes cannabis users. There is a greater chance of a drinker risking the health of their child so why aren’t DFA promoting the more dangerous situation?  

But DFA leave the best to last. In the last paragraph, the last line is the all encompassing attitude and misleading tactics of DFA. Apart from the last line, the last paragraph explains about the possible effects of cannabis on pregnant mothers but is irrelevant if the mother doesn’t use cannabis. There’s lots of grisly descriptions and damning statistics but still has nothing to do with non users or anyone not pregnant. It only mentions medical conditions and statistics on the risk of non- lymphoblastic cancer to infants. But what seems to be the case of a lazy writer, they strangely throw in:

All of this clearly points to the fact that cannabis should be considered at least as serious as other ‘hard’ drugs such as heroin or methamphetamines.”

LOL. Did they forget a paragraph? Maybe they got confused with their own lies and deceit? The last line does though give an appropriate ending to their poor attempt at providing serious information. It is out of place, out of context, not relevant to the current subject, misleading, sensationalism, incorrect and a lie.