|
How Deadly Is Pot?
Excerpt
by Randy Dotinga,
HealthDay
It's no secret that marijuana makes
people high. But can it also send them six feet under?
That's the crux of an ongoing debate
in the latest issue of the British Medical Journal between
experts who disagree about the potential health risks of smoking
pot.
The latest volley in the battle
came this month, when an American doctor took aim at suggestions
by a British team that marijuana could be a major killer.
"I don't think it [marijuana]
contributes very much to people dying. It's not in the league
of alcohol or tobacco," says Dr. Stephen Sidney, an associate
director of clinical research with the Kaiser Permanente health
plan who has studied the effects of marijuana use on life span.
The debate began in May, when the
journal ran an editorial by a British medical professor and colleagues
suggesting the United Kingdom isn't paying enough attention to
the health risks of marijuana. "We were concerned that smoking
is constantly being regarded as a major public health hazard,
while cannabis, which is also usually smoked rather than consumed
any other way, seems to have been completely overlooked,"
says Dr. John A. Henry, a professor at the Imperial College School
of Medicine at St Mary's Hospital in London.
Tobacco smoking kills almost 1
percent of smokers each year in the United Kingdom, and if marijuana
had the same effect, some 30,000 people would die from it annually,
Henry and colleagues wrote. "Even if the number of deaths
attributable to cannabis turned out to be a fraction of that figure,
smoking cannabis [marijuana] would still be a major public health
hazard," the team wrote.
The suggestions in the editorial
spawned a flurry of letters and commentaries. In the most recent
one, printed in the Sept. 20 issue of the British Medical Journal,
Sidney points to two studies that debunked any connection between
marijuana and higher death rates.
In a Swedish study, researchers
found no link between marijuana use among more than 45,000 male
military conscripts, aged 18 to 20, and their death rates over
the next 15 years. Another study of 65,171 men and women enrolled
in the Kaiser Permanente health plan found that, with the exception
of AIDS patients, marijuana users were not more likely than others
to die over a 10-year period.
Sidney acknowledges the follow-up
periods are short, and says the marijuana users in the studies
could still suffer from higher rates of disease later in life.
Even so, evidence suggests smoking
pot is much safer than smoking cigarettes, he says. "One
of the reasons is that marijuana is not inherently as addictive
as tobacco because it doesn't contain nicotine. Many more people
get addicted to tobacco smoking than marijuana smoking."
Also, pot users take much less
smoke into their lungs than tobacco users, and many stop using
marijuana as they get older, Sidney says. "It's the unusual
person who's smoking seven marijuana cigarettes or joints a day.
They're not smoking more than one on average, and they tend to
quit."
Some studies have linked marijuana
use to a variety of medical problems, including schizophrenia,
head and neck cancer and lung cancer, but the research isn't conclusive,
Sidney says. There's also evidence that suggests people with heart
disease should be careful about smoking pot.
What to do? "There are common-sense
measures about using marijuana," Sidney suggests. "It
should be discouraged in teenagers. Young teenagers getting involved
in drugs are going to have more of a problem with it. And people
ought not to be driving around in cars and operating dangerous
machinery when they're intoxicated with anything."
On the other side of the debate,
Henry wants to see more prevention efforts, if only because pot
smoking may contribute to mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.
"This alone is sufficient for a public health campaign, given
the disabling nature of the disorder for the individual and the
massive public health burden it imposes on society," he says.
More information
To learn more about marijuana,
see the National
Institute on Drug Abuse or, for a different perspective, try
the National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|