Pubdate: Sat, 30 Nov 2013
Source: Times-Standard (Eureka, CA)
Copyright: 2013 Times-Standard
Contact: http://www.times-standard.com/writeus
Website: http://www.times-standard.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1051
Author: Thadeus Greenson

WHAT ARE YOU SMOKING? STUDY FINDS PESTICIDES TRANSFER TO MARIJUANA SMOKE

When you take a hit of marijuana, you might be inhaling a lot more than pot.

During a recent presentation at Humboldt State University, Jeffrey 
Raber said a recent study he conducted found that up to 70 percent of 
the pesticides found on a marijuana bud can transfer to the smoke 
being inhaled.

"I think that what's so alarming to us is that such a huge amount of 
pesticide material could be transferred," Raber said. "And, you have 
to consider that when you inhale (something), it's much like 
injecting it directly into your blood stream."

Raber -- who holds a PhD in chemistry from the University of Southern 
California and runs The Werc Shop, a medical cannabis testing 
laboratory in Los Angeles -- spoke at HSU earlier this month as the 
latest speaker in the Humboldt Institute for Interdisciplinary 
Marijuana Research's lecture series.

Titled "Medical Cannabis Quality Control in California: Keeping a 
Weed Free Garden," Raber's talk covered an array of topics focused on 
laboratory testing of marijuana, including the dangers of lurking 
contaminants and pesticides.

On the pesticide issue, Raber said it's important to remember that 
smoking a marijuana bud that's been sprayed with chemicals is far 
different than eating a non-organic tomato. First and foremost, he 
said, there are no controls over what's sprayed on marijuana crops. 
And, while most people would rinse off a tomato before eating it, 
they can't wash a bud before putting it in their pipe. The body also 
has filters in place for things that are ingested, he said, but not 
for what's inhaled.

"You don't have the first pass metabolism of the liver," he said. 
"You don't have the lack of absorptivity going through the stomach or 
the gut lining. It's a very different equation when you're inhaling."

Raber said about 10 percent of the marijuana that comes through his 
laboratory for testing registers positive for pesticides. Those 
samples are only from medical marijuana dispensaries and patients who 
have sought out testing, he said. In a small random study his 
laboratory performed, Raber said more than 35 percent of marijuana 
failed pesticide tests.

"I think all that says is we really, really need some serious 
regulations within California to help us clean up our supply, 
especially in the medical patient context," Raber said. "These are 
people that are immunocompromised, they're undergoing chemotherapy, 
they're very sick with antibacterial loads. We can't be subjecting 
them to more of these types of potentially harmful contaminants when 
they're looking to this as a medicine source."

Humboldt County Sheriff Mike Downey said his deputies have been 
finding massive amounts of high-powered pesticides at marijuana 
gardens throughout the county, many of which have posted medical 
marijuana recommendations -- meaning the marijuana grown there could 
be heading for collectives and, ultimately, to patients.

"I would be very concerned if I were a consumer," Downey said.

Downey said he's been looking for a study like Raber's to quantify 
the dangers of smoking pesticide-laden marijuana, and he hopes to see more.

"I think there needs to be some type of direct evidence of what 
(patients) are getting, what they're smoking, so the general public 
can start to understand what they're dealing with," Downey said.

Raber's study only goes so far. He said his laboratory tests for 30 
to 40 types of chemicals, and works off the United States 
Environmental Protection Agency intake limits for things like apples 
and pears. It's far from an exact science, and he said his laboratory 
hasn't done any testing looking at variations between specific pesticides.

Downey said he'd like to see some studies specifically looking at 
cumulative impacts of inhaling these substances over the course of 
years, or even decades.

Mary Ellen Jerkavich, executive director of the Humboldt Patient 
Resource Center, said she believes marijuana is inherently a safe 
product, but is being turned into something decidedly unsafe by 
growers looking to maximize profits or save their crops by any means 
necessary when spider mites or other pests strike.

"When you (use pesticides), you've turned it into something 
different," she said. "It's crazy. It's super scary."

Jerkavich said her center grows all of its own product and doesn't 
use pesticides or other chemicals. The center sends samples to be 
tested, she said, trying to make sure it is offering patients a 
reliably consistent product. When initially looking for a testing 
laboratory, Jerkavich said the center sent samples to four labs to 
test for levels of THC, Cannabidiol and Cannabinol. Each lab returned 
vastly different results, she said.

That touches on another problem with the industry, according to 
Raber, who said that just as there is no licensing or oversight of 
growers, there is none for testing laboratories either.

"Unfortunately, today in California, anyone can pretty much call 
themselves a lab, which is sometimes pretty demeaning to the word," 
he said. "There's no qualification."

The pesticide issue was just a small point in Raber's larger talk at 
HSU, which touched on everything from erroneous branding at 
dispensaries and testing procedures to the various components of 
marijuana and the ways to determine the best strands to treat 
specific ailments. One theme was consistent, however.

"Buyer beware," Raber said. "You should really look for lab-tested 
products. ... With no regulations and no quality control, anything 
that can be brought out to the market will go out to the market."

Downey, who has gotten a close-up look at the some of the supply side 
of that market in Humboldt County, said the state really needs to 
step up to the plate and regulate the marijuana industry.

"We have legislators that are supposed to be dealing with this kind 
of thing, but they continue to bury their heads in the sand," Downey 
said. "I think the general public is at risk. Where is the common 
sense in this? There is none."

On the web:

To view Raber's full lecture, visit 
http//humboldt-dspace.calstate.edu/bitstream/handle/2148/1628/HIIMR_Raber_video/html?sequence=5
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom