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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Toddlers Made Ill By Dope
Title:New Zealand: Toddlers Made Ill By Dope
Published On:2002-03-08
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-24 18:07:54
TODDLERS MADE ILL BY DOPE

Thirty-three children under 2 1/2 have been admitted to North Island
hospitals with cannabis poisoning in the past six years, says Wanganui
paediatrician John Goldsmith.

Dr Goldsmith, who collected and collated the information from five North
Island hospitals, said he had also received informal reports of cases in
the South Island.

"It is a nationwide problem," he said. "I believe up to 100 children each
year may be admitted to New Zealand hospitals but not all doctors recognise
the symptoms.

"As most of the children recover within 12 hours, the doctors may not
always do a urine test to find the cause of the child's coma or muscle
spasms, so they are not identified to the health system."

Dr Goldsmith said that in all the North Island cases the children were aged
between 8 months and 2 1/2 years and had either eaten cannabis oil from
capsules they found lying around or had cannabis identified in their urine
tests.

"Some may have deliberately been given cannabis or exposed to cannabis smoke."

All the children were drowsy but some were deeply unconscious and a number
needed intensive care.

Some also needed tests such as spinal fluid collection or CT scans because
the cause of their coma was not known, and about half the children had
worrying symptoms such as slow breathing or muscle spasms which looked like
convulsions.

Dr Goldsmith said parents were usually reluctant to admit their child had
access to cannabis but often confirmed the suspicions of health workers
when directly asked. "There needs to be much better education about the
dangers."
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