Pubdate: Friday, 6 March 1998
Source: The Independent 
Author: Anthony Bevins, Political Editor
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/

LORDS TO STUDY CANNABIS RISKS 

THE scientific risks of taking cannabis for medical and recreational
purposes are to be examined by a Lords investigation, it was announced
yesterday. Lord Perry of Walton, who said the committee of peers had agreed
not to discuss whether any of them had taken the drug, told a press
conference the investigation was not expected to result in a call for
legalisation.

But it would offer an informed scientific assessment of the balance of
risks relating to the drug. The inquiry by the Lords Committee on Science
and Technology, half of whose members are medically qualified, will be
advised by Leslie Iverson, visiting Professor of Pharmacology at Oxford
University, who specialises in the effects of drugs on the brain. The two
key questions to be addressed are: "How strong is the scientific evidence
in favour of permitting medical use?" and "How strong is the scientific
evidence in favour of maintaining prohibition of recreational use?"

Lord Perry, a Liberal Democrat peer who is a former Professor of
Pharmacology and founding vice-chancellor of the Open University, said:
"The recreational use of alcohol and tobacco are attached by risks. There
is no ban on either at the moment.

"The question then arises, at what level of risk should people be allowed
to make their own judgment about whether they're prepared to take that
risk? It's a question of whether the risks that are obtained in evidence
are regarded as sufficient to warrant a government ban, or whether they are
risks that individuals might be expected to take for themselves - like
tobacco, like alcohol, like any of the things, like coffee, like tea.
They're all drugs that have risks."

Asked what drugs he took himself, Lord Perry said: "We did discuss this in
committee and decided that what we took was private." When pressed, he said
he did drink coffee and tea, and occasionally drank alcohol, but did not
smoke tobacco.

The committee had discussed cannabis and members' personal use of it. "We
decided not to make public ... that that was not a matter we were going to
make public." The committee, which will take written submissions as well as
evidence in public sessions, starts its hearings with the Advisory Council
on Misuse of Drugs on April, with evidence later in April to be taken from
the British Medical Association and the authors of its report on
therapeutic use of cannabis; the Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics; and
the Multiple Sclerosis Society.

Evidence is to be sought on a number of questions, including: "What are the
physiological effects (immediate, long-term and cumulative) of taking
cannabis, in its various forms? What are the psychological effects? How do
these effects vary with particular methods of preparation and
administration? To what extent is cannabis addictive? To what extent do
users develop tolerance to cannabis?