Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jun 2010
Source: Philadelphia Inquirer, The (PA)
Copyright: 2010 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc
Contact:  http://www.philly.com/inquirer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340
Author: George Ball
Note: George Ball is a past president of the American  Horticultural Society
and the chairman of W. Atlee  Burpee & Co. in Warminster.

SOBER REFLECTION IS IN ORDER

Let's rethink the rush to make marijuana a legal  medicine.

We live in a time that merits a new edition of  Extraordinary Popular
Delusions and the Madness of  Crowds, Charles Mackay's classic 1841
study of human  follies and frenzies, including witch hunts, alchemy,
and bursting financial bubbles. One delusion now in  full bloom is the
movement to legalize medical  marijuana, which is proceeding apace
without  significant care or consideration on the part of the
government, the medical and scientific community, or  the public.

With California leading, 14 states have legalized  medical marijuana,
and 11 others are considering doing  so. New Jersey's governor and
lawmakers recently  wrangled over implementation of its new
medical-marijuana law, while Philadelphia's current and  former
district attorneys argued about a push to lessen  penalties for possession.

This rampaging weed of a public policy seems eerily  immune to the
kind of scientific testing and review  routinely accorded to the
regulation of food and  medicine. You might think marijuana -
classified as a  federal Schedule I drug, or one with a high potential
  for abuse and "no currently accepted medical use" -  would get
special scrutiny before it's approved as  medicine. You would be wrong.

On this issue, the public and policymakers have thrown  caution to the
smoke-filled winds. California's  medical-marijuana laws are a
hodgepodge, changing from  county to county like something dreamed up
by Cheech  and Chong. Today there are reportedly about 600  marijuana
dispensaries in Los Angeles alone.

Far from being clinical, some feature carnivalesque  hucksters who
stand outside and lure in new clients.  And pretty much anyone
claiming a headache can get a  prescription.

As a horticulturist, I worry that these patients are  using a
garden-grown substance whose dangers are  greater than its benefits.
They are the subjects of a  loopy social-policy experiment.

I do not propose denying medical marijuana to those in  chronic pain
from cancer, AIDS, or other ailments.  Marijuana's value as a pain
reliever, as well as its  overall safety, deserves investigation. The
American  Medical Association has sensibly urged the federal
government to loosen restrictions that impede serious  research. But
right now, the scientific findings are  far from conclusive.

Yet the same people who want their food grown  organically and
sustainably - and who flee from corn  syrup, butter, and salt as from
a plague - blithely  ignore pot's provenance. They seem indifferent
not only  to where it comes from, but to who sows and grows it,  and
what manner of fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides,  and growth
stimulants are used.

Today's pot is far stronger than the weed that gave  young boomers a
buzz. Those seeking pain relief from a  few puffs of marijuana can
experience anxiety, panic,  and hallucinations. Some help!

While there is limited evidence to support marijuana's  medical
benefits, there is plenty confirming its  dangers, substantiated by
significant increases in  mentions of marijuana as a reason for
emergency room  visits over the last 15 years. And pot messes with
your  head, impairing short-term memory, verbal skill,  judgment, and
perception. Anyone who's talked to a  pothead will testify to that.

Pot-using teenagers have poorer grades and poorer  attendance. One
study found that among those arrested,  41 percent of men and 27
percent of women tested  positive for marijuana use. Another found
that 6 to 11  percent of fatal-accident victims tested positive for
it - a painkiller indeed.

Since pot's potency can vary dramatically, patients  have no
guidelines for dosage, so you might say it's  hit or miss. This and
many of marijuana's other perils  can be effectively addressed by
Marinol, an approved  prescription medicine that offers calibrated
doses of a  synthetic version of pot's key ingredient, THC.

Medical marijuana deserves serious attention from the  Obama
administration, Congress, the FDA, and the AMA.  What are they waiting
for? Unchecked, this latest  extraordinary popular delusion will have
serious social  and medical consequences.

George Ball is a past president of the American  Horticultural Society
and the chairman of W. Atlee  Burpee & Co. in Warminster. 
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