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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Cannabis As Toxic As Tobacco: Study
Title:Canada: Cannabis As Toxic As Tobacco: Study
Published On:2009-08-06
Source:Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB)
Fetched On:2009-08-07 18:19:39
CANNABIS AS TOXIC AS TOBACCO: STUDY

(CNS) - SMOKING pot can cause as much damage to cells and DNA as
tobacco smoke, according to a group of Canadian researchers that is
challenging the belief marijuana does less harm than cigarettes.

Rebecca Maertens, a researcher from Health Canada and co-author of
the study, says many Canadians believe marijuana smoke is less toxic
and causes less damage than tobacco because pot is "natural."

Despite several experiments that show marijuana use to have adverse
health effects, the prevalence of marijuana use in Canada has
increased over the past decade, while the incidence of tobacco use
has decreased.

Nearly one quarter of Canadians between the ages of 15 and 24
reported using pot in the previous 12 months according to 2006
Statistics Canada report -- more than 14 per cent of those said they
used the drug daily.

The team behind this study suggested that a lack of understanding
about the dangers of pot plays a part in why young people are
cavalier about smoking it.

Neither marijuana nor the main psychoactive component of the plant,
THC, has been shown to cause cancer. There are, however, substances
in marijuana that can be harmful to a person, according to previous
studies on the drug.

Negative health effects induced by smoking marijuana, such as chronic
bronchitis, have been well-documented, as have other effects.

A 2007 study from New Zealand, for example, examined the effects of
cannabis on lung capacity. The results suggested that marijuana smoke
compromised lung efficiency between 2.5 and five times more than tobacco smoke.

Despite some knowledge surrounding marijuana's adverse effects on
lungs, researchers still have little knowledge about the plant's
potential to cause lung cancer, Maertens said.

This is due in part to the difficulty researchers have had in
identifying and following subjects who have smoked pot but not
tobacco, Maertens said. In this study, scientists exposed animal
cells and bacteria separately to smoke from marijuana and tobacco plants.
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