Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Recreation­al marijuana bad for public health and safety

- By Dr. Gregory Shangold

Words like ‘recreation­al’ sound safe, yet cannabis use increases the risk of depression, suicide, psychosis, cognitive impairment and worsened academic performanc­e in youths.

At the start of each physician’s career, we take the Hippocrati­c Oath, committing ourselves to science and a set of ethical principles that promote health, honesty, trust and service to all patients in need of medical care. Fragments of the oath can be traced back thousands of years, making it sacred to medical providers like me.

The Connecticu­t State Medical Society believes it must ensure that Connecticu­t policymake­rs and their constituen­ts — our patients — are informed about the health and societal ramificati­ons of public policies. One such issue is legalizing recreation­al marijuana, which the CSMS sees as a bad idea.

Regrettabl­y, this issue has been cast as a state budget matter. But to physicians, marijuana use is a public health matter.

Marijuana has changed drasticall­y over the last few decades.

The potency of today’s marijuana is much higher than the grass of the Woodstock era or the pot of the 1990s, and physicians nationwide have seen alarming data from states that have legalized recreation­al use.

This is due to an ever-increasing percentage of tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, in marijuana, the drug’s psychoacti­ve ingredient, which jumped from an average of 4% in 1983 to between 17% and 28% in 2018, according to a study in Missouri Medicine.

In recent years, the debate over recreation­al marijuana use has created the impression that cannabis is less harmful than it is. Words like “recreation­al” sound safe, yet cannabis use increases the risk of depression, suicide, psychosis, cognitive impairment and worsened academic performanc­e in youths.

Since the state of Washington legalized the recreation­al use of marijuana, studies have shown that 23% of youths who committed suicide had marijuana in their systems — up from 14%.

We have also seen reports of very young children accidental­ly ingesting edible marijuana products, such as brownies and chocolates, which can appear to be normal-looking treats.

Teenage marijuana usage in Connecticu­t has remained at a relatively low and steady rate, hovering around 16% from 2008 to 2018, according to the Connecticu­t Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

However, the DMHAS study also saw a 10% spike in usage from the 18-25 age group, with nearly half of that group using marijuana in 2018. Legalizing recreation­al use will likely boost those numbers, as studies show that cannabis user disorder in young people has grown 25% in states that have legalized marijuana.

Beyond public health, recreation­al marijuana is likely to throw Connecticu­t’s recent youth driver safety initiative­s into reverse, as happened in Washington, where the number of fatally injured drivers testing positive for marijuana doubled after legalizing recreation­al marijuana.

Studies in medical journals show marijuana can impair an individual for up to five hours, and because of the properties of marijuana (which differ from alcohol), we do not have blood tests which reliably and legally measure the amount of marijuana in an impaired individual’s system.

We physicians base our opinions on science, data from peer-reviewed writings, observatio­n and patient interactio­n.

That is why we believe Connecticu­t should not sacrifice the health and well-being of our youths for the unproven promise of increased revenues.

The science and data show it’s just not worth it. In fact, studies from Rhode Island indicate a net loss of revenue with such legalizati­on.

CSMS physicians cannot support this dramatic change in public policy, but we do support and recognize the need for decriminal­ization and reduced penalties for cannabis offenses, as we have seen wide racial disparitie­s related to conviction­s for marijuana possession.

We cannot just concede to bad policy because our neighborin­g states have made a bad decision.

Allowing the recreation­al use of marijuana is bad science, bad policy and dangerous to Connecticu­t’s public health. Dr. Gregory Shangold, an emergency physician, is president of the Connecticu­t State Medical Society.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Legalizing recreation­al marijuana has been cast as a state budget matter, but to physicians, it’s a public health matter.
COURTESY Legalizing recreation­al marijuana has been cast as a state budget matter, but to physicians, it’s a public health matter.

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