Waterloo Region Record

Marijuana’s medical attributes may be overstated

Pot’s benefits have been overstated by advocates and scientists, whose bias may have tainted research

- LEE HARDING Lee Harding is research fellow for the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Marijuana users want society to believe the very thing they’ve told themselves for years — that the highs of marijuana far outweigh its lows when it comes to health and the effect on the masses.

Informed minds that remain sober and less tainted by personal bias realize that’s probably not the case.

Cannabis is demonstrab­ly helpful for a limited number of conditions and even then may not be the best clinical first choice.

Meanwhile, those damned downsides remain.

In Canada, medical marijuana use has grown dramatical­ly from just 7,914 registered users in 2014 to 201,398 in 2017. This prevalence varies widely, from just 0.07 per cent of the population in Quebec to 1.7 per cent in Alberta. But as popularity has grown, many doctors have wanted more guidance as to when cannabis is an appropriat­e option.

From a public relations perspectiv­e, medicinal marijuana was a no-brainer for pot enthusiast­s. Once society conceded an upside to marijuana, it became difficult to argue for its prohibitio­n to prevent harm. It should surprise no one if marijuana’s benefits have been overhyped or overstated, not only by political advocates but also by researcher­s whose bias may have helped them find what they wanted to see. Perhaps some were blinded by the haze of their own consumptio­n.

Researcher­s at the University of Alberta found the positive case for pot was weaker than many have been led to believe. G. Michael Allen and 18 colleagues looked at 31 systematic reviews of the therapeuti­c effects of cannabinoi­ds, which altogether encompasse­d 1,085 studies. Allan’s team found that while studies were plentiful, quality was rare. Randomized clinical trials were limited or absent. Small sample sizes and short durations were common, making false positives more likely. Important quality markers were often absent, underminin­g the reliabilit­y of the results, if not creating outright bias.

Earlier this year, the Canadian Family Physician published Allan’s “Simplified guideline for prescribin­g medical cannabinoi­ds in primary care.” Copies were sent to 30,000 doctors, recommendi­ng that cannabinoi­ds be prescribed solely for “neuropathi­c pain, palliative and end-oflife pain, chemothera­py-induced nausea and vomiting, and spasticity due to multiple sclerosis or spinal cord injury.” Only the synthetic cannabinoi­d of nabilone or nabiximols is recommende­d, and even then only after two other options have been tried.

These options exclude actual pot-smoking, partly because the chemical compositio­n of an individual plant always varies — sometimes substantia­lly. Cannabis has more than 500 compounds and over 100 cannabinoi­ds have been identified. Tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) is the primary psychoacti­ve component. Cannabidio­l (CBD) is also significan­t and seems to prevent some of the adverse effects of THC.

Marijuana has grown in potency in both America and Europe. One study of American pot showed that in the 20 years following 1995, THC content had tripled while CBD dropped. Whereas THC content had been 14 times that of CBD, by the end of 2014, that number was 80.

Allan prefers that doctors prescribe cannabis as a third option at best, due to such potential harms as brain damage.

Endocannab­inoids help synapses (which connect neurons) form properly as brains develop, a process often incomplete until age 25. Regular marijuana use in adolescenc­e alters brain connectivi­ty and reduces volume, inhibiting memory, learning and impulse control.

One 25-year study of 4,000 young adults found that marijuana lowered verbal memory. A study in New Zealand found that frequent marijuana use in adolescenc­e led to a loss of six IQ points in midadultho­od, even if consumptio­n stopped in adulthood.

High cannabis use also correlates with mental health problems. Use in adolescenc­e increases the risk of schizophre­nia-like psychoses and can actually trigger them. Cannabis users develop psychosis two or three years earlier than others — an effect not seen from alcohol or other substance use.

The potential for lung damage and cancer due to marijuana smoking is greater than that for tobacco. One study even suggested that smoking one joint a day caused the same lung damage and cancer risk as 20 cigarettes. Higher carcinogen­ic content is part of the reason but a greater degree of inhaled smoke is the other. THC also suppresses the immune system.

In addition, marijuana’s cure for budget deficits has been overstated. The federal government has already spent $800 million to prepare for legalizati­on, gobbling more than the first year’s tax revenues.

Now youth can carry five grams (seven joints) without criminal prosecutio­n and return to homes with four plants producing 300 grams each.

The majority of health and social costs won’t be borne for decades. By then, history books will show how marijuana legalizati­on was the successful prescripti­on to mobilize the millennial vote.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The majority of health and social costs from legal pot won’t be borne for decades, Lee Harding writes.
JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS The majority of health and social costs from legal pot won’t be borne for decades, Lee Harding writes.

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