The Scotsman

Drug- related hospital admissions for cannabis use reach record levels

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent

More than one in eight drugrelate­d hospital admissions in Scotland are now caused by cannabis, scotching theories that the substance is harmless, according to the Scottish Conservati­ves.

New statistics revealed there were 1,689 people taken to hospital in 2017- 18 after using the drug, either from overdosing or suffering psychologi­cal effects – the equivalent of 32 people a week, and a sevenfold rise since figures were first recorded in the mid- 1990s.

The number of cannabis users admitted was not only at the highest ever but, at 13.5 per cent of all drug- related admissions, it was also the largest proportion ever.

It compares to just 6.5 per cent when the records began in the mid- 1990s, and is nearly the double the rate from when the SNP came to power, when the drug accounted for just 7.5 per cent of drug- related admissions.

Earlier this week, figures from NHS data ser vice ISD Scotland showed the overall number of people rushed to hospital after using drugs was at a record high. Across t h e c o u n t r y, t h e r e we r e 10,509 admissions, a four- fold increase from 20 years ago.

Medical cannabis was legalised by Home Secretary Sajid Javid last year with specialist doctors able to prescribe the drug since 1 November. The new law moved cannabis from schedule 1 under the Misuse of Drugs Regulation­s 2001 – meaning it had no therapeuti­c value – to schedule 2, for drugs which are controlled but have a recognised medical use and can be prescribed in certain circumstan­ces.

It follows a string of highprofil­e cases including Scottish woman Karen Gray, who fought to have the drug made available to treat her six- yearold son Murray’s epilepsy.

Scottish Tory public health spokeswoma­n Annie Wells said: “This exposes claims that cannabis is a harmless drug as a nonsense. There is now evidence of dozens of hospital admissions every week as a direct result of people taking cannabis.

“These are individual­s whose lives are being destroyed by a drug that too many people want to see normalised.”

A S c o t t i s h Gove r n ment spokespers­on said: “There is no single, simple solution to addressing the harm caused by drugs. We’re taking forward evidence- based actions and examining how services can evolve to ensure that support is made available to those most in need.

“This renewed f ocus has been backed by additional investment of £ 20 million in drug and alcohol treatment and support services.”

“There is no single, simple solution to addressing the harm caused by drugs. We’re taking forward evidence- based actions”

 ?? PICTURE: SEAN GALLUP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 The Scottish Conservati­ves said the figures expose the claims that cannabis is harmless to be ‘ a nonsense’
PICTURE: SEAN GALLUP/ GETTY IMAGES 0 The Scottish Conservati­ves said the figures expose the claims that cannabis is harmless to be ‘ a nonsense’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom