|
News Release |
1001
Connecticut Ave, NW - Ste 710 - Washington, DC 20036 |
August 20, 1998
Relative Safety Of Moderate Marijuana Smoking Not
Challenged
By New Study
August 20, 1998, Los Angeles:
Long-term marijuana smokers may develop pre-cancerous changes in bronchial cells at
similar rates to tobacco smokers, suggests a UCLA study reported in this week's Journal
of the National Cancer Institute.
NORML board member Dr. John Morgan of the City
University of New York (CUNY) Medical School said that the data must not overshadow
decades of research illustrating the relative safety of moderate marijuana smoking.
"There are no epidemiological or aggregate clinical data showing higher rates
of lung cancer in people who smoke marijuana," he said. Morgan noted that a
decade long study completed by Kaiser Permanente last year found no increase in deaths
among 14,000+ marijuana smokers when compared to nonsmokers.
"Like tobacco smoke, marijuana smoke
contains a number of irritants and carcinogens," Morgan said. "However,
most marijuana-only smokers in the United States probably do not ingest enough smoke to
cause serious lung damage." Marijuana smokers in the UCLA study admitted
smoking 10 joints or more per week for the past five years. Most recreational
marijuana users smoke far less than that, Morgan speculated.
Morgan added that THC, one of the chief active
ingredients in marijuana, does not appear to be carcinogenic and may offer protection
against the development of some malignancies. He pointed to the results of a $2
million federal study demonstrating that rats fed huge doses of THC over long periods
failed to develop cancer and had fewer tumors than rats not given the compound.
The UCLA study found that 54 percent of tobacco
smokers and 67 percent of marijuana smokers showed evidence of potentially cancerous
molecular alternations in their lung tissues. Only 11 percent of nonsmokers showed
any pre-cancerous changes.
Habitual smokers of tobacco and marijuana had a
100 percent incidence of basal cell hyperplasia, a genetic marker associated with
increased risk of lung cancer. One hundred and four people participated in the
study.
NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq.
said the study's findings do not justify arresting and jailing marijuana smokers.
"Any risk presented by marijuana smoking falls well within the ambit of choice
we permit the individual in a free society," he said. "We do not suggest
that marijuana is totally harmless or that it cannot be abused. That is true for all
drugs, including those which are legal. Clearly, however, marijuana's relative risk
to the user and society in no way warrants arresting more than 642,000 marijuana smokers
each year."
Stroup added that the research strengthened the
need to reform federal and state laws that forbid the use of paraphernalia that limits the
amount of noxious smoke inhaled by marijuana consumers. "Any potential health
risk from marijuana smoking comes from the consumption of carcinogenic smoke, not the
active compounds in marijuana. It is counter-productive for the government to forbid
the use of products like vaporizers that can greatly reduce this particular risk to the
lungs."
For more information, please contact either
Dr. John Morgan of CUNY Medical School @ (212) 650-8255 or Paul Armentano of The NORML
Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. Copies of the 1997 Kaiser Permanente marijuana and
mortality study are available upon request from The NORML Foundation.
Best Selling Author Jailed On Medical Marijuana Charges Expected To Post Bail Tonight
August 20, 1998, Los Angeles, CA:
Best selling author and medical marijuana user Peter McWilliams will likely post
$250,000 bail tonight after serving nearly one month in jail on allegations that he
conspired to cultivate marijuana for medical purposes.
McWilliams, who was diagnosed with AIDS and
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in March 1996, uses marijuana to combat the nausea caused by his
life-saving medical treatments. Police arrested McWilliams and eight others on July
23 and charged him with conspiracy to cultivate marijuana. He entered a formal plea
of not guilty to the charges.
"I am a vocal and occasionally effective
proponent of medical marijuana and that is why I am in jail," said McWilliams, who
was featured in May on the ABC News special "Sex, Drugs, and Consenting Adults."
"I use marijuana to treat the nausea caused by my AIDS medications. If I
do not keep the medications down, I will not live. Medical marijuana, for me, is a
matter of life and death."
NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq.
criticized the federal campaign against McWilliams and called his bail excessive.
"This case is an example of the worst abuses of the drug war," he said.
"It is unconscionable to treat sick and dying medical marijuana patients like
criminals."
The arrest of McWilliams proves the federal
government is "fanatically determined to wage its 'war on drugs' -- even if it means
putting sick and dying people in jail," Libertarian Party National Director Ron
Crickenberger said. "Peter McWilliams is the latest victim of the federal
government's campaign to arrest and discredit advocates of medical marijuana."
McWilliams is a #1 best-selling author whose
30+ books include "How to Survive the Loss of a Love" and "Ain't Nobody's
Business If You Do," a stinging criticism of victimless crimes. He is also
owner of Prelude Press, a West Hollywood publishing house.
For more information, please contact either
Keith Stroup of NORML @ (202) 483-5500 or attorney Tanya Kangas of The NORML Foundation @
(202) 483-8751. Additional updates are available online from Marijuananews.com.
West Australia Decriminalizes Marijuana On "Trial" Basis
August 20, 1998, West Australia,
Australia: Government officials announced last week that first time
marijuana users will no longer face criminal charges for possessing less than 50 grams of
the drug. West Australia is the fifth state to enact marijuana decriminalization in
recent years.
Police Commissioner Bob Falconer said that the
new policy will take effect October 1 on a trial basis in the Mirrabooka and Bunbury
police districts. If the trial proves successful, leaders will extend the measure
statewide.
"Western Australia's experimental
marijuana policy is similar to the laws of ten U.S. states where marijuana users face a
civil 'violation' rather than criminal penalties for possessing small amounts of the
drug," NORML Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said. "It is
encouraging to see other regions around the globe adopt these reforms. It is our
hope that West Australian political leaders will adopt this policy statewide and not just
in select regions."
Under the new system, individuals will receive
a warning for possessing marijuana as long as they attend a lecture on the potential
misuse of the drug. "It's not synonymous with being tough on drugs to crunch
people for small quantities of cannabis when it's essentially about an education
issue," Falconer said. He and other law enforcement officials lobbied the
government for the policy change arguing that valuable police and judicial resources were
being wasted prosecuting marijuana smokers.
Other Australian states to recently adopt a
marijuana "caution" system are the Australian Capitol Territory (ACT), the
Northern Territory, South Australia, and Victoria. This spring, the Drug and Alcohol
Council of South Australia concluded a two year national study finding that the
decriminalization of marijuana does not lead to increased use.
For more information, please contact Paul
Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500.
-END-