News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: 2 PUB LTEs: Impartial Cannabis Review Required |
Title: | UK: 2 PUB LTEs: Impartial Cannabis Review Required |
Published On: | 2001-08-08 |
Source: | Times, The (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 11:38:46 |
IMPARTIAL CANNABIS REVIEW REQUIRED
From Dr Philip Robson
Sir, No reasonable person could argue that cannabis is a risk-free drug
(Times 2, August 6; letters, August 4) but the scientific literature
presents real dilemmas. Human studies are often methodologically flawed,
whilst the vast array of reports from animal or in vitro experiments
contain conflicting and equivocal results.
The problem with reviews such as those by Baroness Greenfield (Comment,
July 14) and Dr Thomas Stuttaford (Times 2, July 31) is that they are
partisan and selective. Professor Greenfield is an eminent scientist whose
views are to be taken seriously, but when talking about "severe shrinkage
and death of brain cells" on exposure to cannabis she omitted to refer to
other papers which discuss potent neuroprotective properties of cannabis
constituents.
Dr Stuttaford lists in dramatic style a wide range of cannabis-related
risks. Some of these are likely to be well-founded, especially those
related to the act of smoking itself, but the scientific evidence is rarely
clear-cut. A partisan reviewer of the opposite persuasion would have been
able to make a very different, but perhaps equally compelling, selection
from the literature.
I have been carrying out medical research using cannabis extracts and have
seen at first hand the benefits these can bring, so I am of course no more
impartial than Lady Greenfield or Dr Stuttaford. The Home Secretary and
even former candidates in the Tory leadership election said that they would
like to see an improvement in the quality of the debate surrounding this
drug (report, June 25). An important contribution to this would be a
systematic and critical review headed by an appropriately qualified
scientist with no private agenda to pursue.
Yours sincerely, PHILIP ROBSON (Medical director, G. W. Pharmaceuticals;
senior research fellow, University of Oxford, Department of Psychiatry),
Warneford Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX. August 6.
From Mr David Wilson
Sir, There is no limit to the number of substances and objects with which
humans can do themselves harm. Existing drugs and combinations of drugs,
and others yet to be devised, will all be used or abused by those willing
to do so; alcohol will be consumed to excess. In the process many people
will become ill while unfortunately some will die.
Legislation to control the abuse of drugs is always bound to be out of
date. It can be argued that the State has a duty to protect the vulnerable,
such as children, and to protect society in general from the effects of
dangerous behaviour, such as driving while under the influence of drink or
drugs. Beyond that, however, are we right to use legislation in order to
protect people from what some might regard as their own folly? Glue and
alcohol have been regulated rather than banned, despite their harmful
effects if abused. If drugs of choice were dealt with in the same way
society would not fall apart, but the evils attendant on prohibition would
disappear. Crime would not vanish, but the cause of much of it would.
Yours faithfully, DAVID WILSON, Bridell, Cardigan, August 4.
From Dr Philip Robson
Sir, No reasonable person could argue that cannabis is a risk-free drug
(Times 2, August 6; letters, August 4) but the scientific literature
presents real dilemmas. Human studies are often methodologically flawed,
whilst the vast array of reports from animal or in vitro experiments
contain conflicting and equivocal results.
The problem with reviews such as those by Baroness Greenfield (Comment,
July 14) and Dr Thomas Stuttaford (Times 2, July 31) is that they are
partisan and selective. Professor Greenfield is an eminent scientist whose
views are to be taken seriously, but when talking about "severe shrinkage
and death of brain cells" on exposure to cannabis she omitted to refer to
other papers which discuss potent neuroprotective properties of cannabis
constituents.
Dr Stuttaford lists in dramatic style a wide range of cannabis-related
risks. Some of these are likely to be well-founded, especially those
related to the act of smoking itself, but the scientific evidence is rarely
clear-cut. A partisan reviewer of the opposite persuasion would have been
able to make a very different, but perhaps equally compelling, selection
from the literature.
I have been carrying out medical research using cannabis extracts and have
seen at first hand the benefits these can bring, so I am of course no more
impartial than Lady Greenfield or Dr Stuttaford. The Home Secretary and
even former candidates in the Tory leadership election said that they would
like to see an improvement in the quality of the debate surrounding this
drug (report, June 25). An important contribution to this would be a
systematic and critical review headed by an appropriately qualified
scientist with no private agenda to pursue.
Yours sincerely, PHILIP ROBSON (Medical director, G. W. Pharmaceuticals;
senior research fellow, University of Oxford, Department of Psychiatry),
Warneford Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX. August 6.
From Mr David Wilson
Sir, There is no limit to the number of substances and objects with which
humans can do themselves harm. Existing drugs and combinations of drugs,
and others yet to be devised, will all be used or abused by those willing
to do so; alcohol will be consumed to excess. In the process many people
will become ill while unfortunately some will die.
Legislation to control the abuse of drugs is always bound to be out of
date. It can be argued that the State has a duty to protect the vulnerable,
such as children, and to protect society in general from the effects of
dangerous behaviour, such as driving while under the influence of drink or
drugs. Beyond that, however, are we right to use legislation in order to
protect people from what some might regard as their own folly? Glue and
alcohol have been regulated rather than banned, despite their harmful
effects if abused. If drugs of choice were dealt with in the same way
society would not fall apart, but the evils attendant on prohibition would
disappear. Crime would not vanish, but the cause of much of it would.
Yours faithfully, DAVID WILSON, Bridell, Cardigan, August 4.
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