News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: We Screwed Up |
Title: | US: Web: We Screwed Up |
Published On: | 2000-08-26 |
Source: | MoJo Wire (US Web) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 11:15:03 |
Cited: The Lindesmith Center: http://www.lindesmith.org/
DrugSense: http://www.DrugSense.org/
WE SCREWED UP
Al Gore on Drugs (MoJo Wire, Aug. 15, 2000)
Several readers brought to our attention a discrepancy in the numbers
relating to illicit drug use.
The article originally read: "Alcohol is a factor in 100,000 American
deaths each year, compared to 52,000 for all illicit drugs combined.
Marijuana causes a tiny fraction of those deaths."
Some clarifications are in order.
In fact, alcohol is a factor in at least 100,000 American deaths per
year. Illicit and illegal drugs, however, directly and indirectly
cause between 10,000 and 16,000 deaths per year, according to figures
from the Drug Abuse Warning Network and the Lindesmith Center.
According to Drug Sense, the 52,000 drug-death figure drug czar Barry
McCaffrey has circulated, and which our article used, comes from
unpublished research prepared for Office of Drug Control Policy, which
has still not been released for public scrutiny. The number also can
be deceptive, in that it includes all drug-related deaths, including
suicide, homicide, motor vehicle injury, HIV, pneumonia, hepatitis,
endocarditis, and infant deaths, as well as overdoses.
Marijuana has been, in fact, never proven to have directly caused any
death, according to Drug Enforcement Administration's Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young. Young's
report said one would have to smoke 1,500 pounds of marijuana (20,000
to 40,000 joints) within about 15 minutes to overdose on the drug.
However, marijuana has been involved in some deaths. While precise
numbers of marijuana-related fatalities are difficult to find, medical
examiners in a recent study reported that the presence of
marijuana/hashish in the bodies of drug-overdose and drug-related
deaths rose 12 percent from 1997 and 1998.
We regret the errors.
DrugSense: http://www.DrugSense.org/
WE SCREWED UP
Al Gore on Drugs (MoJo Wire, Aug. 15, 2000)
Several readers brought to our attention a discrepancy in the numbers
relating to illicit drug use.
The article originally read: "Alcohol is a factor in 100,000 American
deaths each year, compared to 52,000 for all illicit drugs combined.
Marijuana causes a tiny fraction of those deaths."
Some clarifications are in order.
In fact, alcohol is a factor in at least 100,000 American deaths per
year. Illicit and illegal drugs, however, directly and indirectly
cause between 10,000 and 16,000 deaths per year, according to figures
from the Drug Abuse Warning Network and the Lindesmith Center.
According to Drug Sense, the 52,000 drug-death figure drug czar Barry
McCaffrey has circulated, and which our article used, comes from
unpublished research prepared for Office of Drug Control Policy, which
has still not been released for public scrutiny. The number also can
be deceptive, in that it includes all drug-related deaths, including
suicide, homicide, motor vehicle injury, HIV, pneumonia, hepatitis,
endocarditis, and infant deaths, as well as overdoses.
Marijuana has been, in fact, never proven to have directly caused any
death, according to Drug Enforcement Administration's Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young. Young's
report said one would have to smoke 1,500 pounds of marijuana (20,000
to 40,000 joints) within about 15 minutes to overdose on the drug.
However, marijuana has been involved in some deaths. While precise
numbers of marijuana-related fatalities are difficult to find, medical
examiners in a recent study reported that the presence of
marijuana/hashish in the bodies of drug-overdose and drug-related
deaths rose 12 percent from 1997 and 1998.
We regret the errors.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...