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The risk curve of societal harm from marijuana when graphed from a policy of complete prohibition to one of unregulated access is U shaped, according to a panel of experts who participated in a workshop on the harms and benefits of cannabis at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Based on more than 80 years of experience, it is clear that prohibition supports criminal activity but does not eliminate use, said Jason Hershberger, MD, chair of the department of psychiatry at Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center, New York. With progressive degrees of decriminalization, the harms to society associated with criminal distribution and the criminalization of use decreases, but they are replaced with increasing societal risks imposed by the availability of an intoxicating substance.

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
(From left) Dr. Jason E. Hershberger, Dr. Stephan M. Carlson, Dr. Manuel Lopez-Leon, and Dr. Jose P. Vitor
“From a public health perspective, there is an inflection point somewhere along this curve,” Dr. Hershberger said.

Theoretically, one argument is that the inflection point occurs where cannabis has been decriminalized for medical indications but prohibited for recreational use. But this is a tenuous position. Clinicians, including psychiatrists, might support the use of cannabis to reduce stress, but it is well known that the pleasant intoxication provided by cannabis is relaxing – whether or not this is characterized as stress relief.

“The conversation has to start with the basic realization that cannabis is perceived by many people to have beneficial effects,” reported Stephan M. Carlson, MD, who also is affiliated with Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center. Based on his belief that marijuana, after alcohol and tobacco, may soon be the third legal drug where it isn’t already, “physicians have just a temporary role” in mediating the debate about medical legalization from a legal or political standpoint. Why? Because this part of the debate is growing irrelevant.

This does not mean medical indications or medical harms are not valid topics of discussion, Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson said. The problem is that recreational use is supplanting medical use as the central issue in making this drug available.

The road toward U.S. legalization started in 1996, when California voters approved the use of marijuana for medical indications. Other states followed. Then, in 2012, Colorado and Washington became the first states to approve the drug for recreational use. In total, 29 states now permit some form of legal use of marijuana. In addition, marijuana possession has been decriminalized in several states where it remains illegal.

 

 


“From the federal perspective, marijuana is still a Schedule I drug. This means that it is easier to conduct research on cocaine, which is a Schedule II drug, than it is on marijuana,” Dr. Hershberger said. While the current presidential administration has adopted a tougher stance on distribution and use of marijuana than the previous, more than 60% of Americans in surveys support decriminalization of marijuana, according to Dr. Hershberger. He suggested that the current acceptability of marijuana is the reason that a recent survey indicated that more U.S. high school seniors than ever before have tried marijuana.

In light of the perceptions that the marijuana ban was ineffective, that marijuana is acceptable, and that profits from marijuana sales and distributions have been going to criminals, depriving government of tax dollars, continued decriminalization appears to be inevitable, Dr. Hershberger said. However, he believes that complete deregulation poses important risk, including an inevitable increase in accidents produced by motor impairment. It is also reasonable to anticipate more substance use in vulnerable populations. The risk to the development of children and adolescents who are likely to gain easier access to cannabis is unknown.

For psychiatrists and other medical specialists who wish to participate in the debate about the degree to which marijuana is decriminalized, both Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson argued that a clear and realistic view of the landscape is essential.

“One of the reasons we are in this state we are in is that many people have declared the war on drugs a failure,” Dr. Hershberger said. Although he acknowledged that recognizing the limited efficacy of a marijuana ban is a reasonable starting point for discussion, he also expressed concern about large corporations being permitted to market cannabis in a way that obscures its risks or encourages use by those at greatest risk of harm, such as minors.
 

 


“We have to ask ourselves, is America ready for a cannabis commercial during the Super Bowl?” Dr. Hershberger said. He believes that an important trade-off exists for risks regardless of the degree to which marijuana is legalized.

“We have to approach this in the context of our current reality,” Dr. Carlson agreed. He, like Dr. Hershberger, cautioned that there are no simple answers.

Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson reported no potential conflicts of interest.
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The risk curve of societal harm from marijuana when graphed from a policy of complete prohibition to one of unregulated access is U shaped, according to a panel of experts who participated in a workshop on the harms and benefits of cannabis at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Based on more than 80 years of experience, it is clear that prohibition supports criminal activity but does not eliminate use, said Jason Hershberger, MD, chair of the department of psychiatry at Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center, New York. With progressive degrees of decriminalization, the harms to society associated with criminal distribution and the criminalization of use decreases, but they are replaced with increasing societal risks imposed by the availability of an intoxicating substance.

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
(From left) Dr. Jason E. Hershberger, Dr. Stephan M. Carlson, Dr. Manuel Lopez-Leon, and Dr. Jose P. Vitor
“From a public health perspective, there is an inflection point somewhere along this curve,” Dr. Hershberger said.

Theoretically, one argument is that the inflection point occurs where cannabis has been decriminalized for medical indications but prohibited for recreational use. But this is a tenuous position. Clinicians, including psychiatrists, might support the use of cannabis to reduce stress, but it is well known that the pleasant intoxication provided by cannabis is relaxing – whether or not this is characterized as stress relief.

“The conversation has to start with the basic realization that cannabis is perceived by many people to have beneficial effects,” reported Stephan M. Carlson, MD, who also is affiliated with Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center. Based on his belief that marijuana, after alcohol and tobacco, may soon be the third legal drug where it isn’t already, “physicians have just a temporary role” in mediating the debate about medical legalization from a legal or political standpoint. Why? Because this part of the debate is growing irrelevant.

This does not mean medical indications or medical harms are not valid topics of discussion, Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson said. The problem is that recreational use is supplanting medical use as the central issue in making this drug available.

The road toward U.S. legalization started in 1996, when California voters approved the use of marijuana for medical indications. Other states followed. Then, in 2012, Colorado and Washington became the first states to approve the drug for recreational use. In total, 29 states now permit some form of legal use of marijuana. In addition, marijuana possession has been decriminalized in several states where it remains illegal.

 

 


“From the federal perspective, marijuana is still a Schedule I drug. This means that it is easier to conduct research on cocaine, which is a Schedule II drug, than it is on marijuana,” Dr. Hershberger said. While the current presidential administration has adopted a tougher stance on distribution and use of marijuana than the previous, more than 60% of Americans in surveys support decriminalization of marijuana, according to Dr. Hershberger. He suggested that the current acceptability of marijuana is the reason that a recent survey indicated that more U.S. high school seniors than ever before have tried marijuana.

In light of the perceptions that the marijuana ban was ineffective, that marijuana is acceptable, and that profits from marijuana sales and distributions have been going to criminals, depriving government of tax dollars, continued decriminalization appears to be inevitable, Dr. Hershberger said. However, he believes that complete deregulation poses important risk, including an inevitable increase in accidents produced by motor impairment. It is also reasonable to anticipate more substance use in vulnerable populations. The risk to the development of children and adolescents who are likely to gain easier access to cannabis is unknown.

For psychiatrists and other medical specialists who wish to participate in the debate about the degree to which marijuana is decriminalized, both Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson argued that a clear and realistic view of the landscape is essential.

“One of the reasons we are in this state we are in is that many people have declared the war on drugs a failure,” Dr. Hershberger said. Although he acknowledged that recognizing the limited efficacy of a marijuana ban is a reasonable starting point for discussion, he also expressed concern about large corporations being permitted to market cannabis in a way that obscures its risks or encourages use by those at greatest risk of harm, such as minors.
 

 


“We have to ask ourselves, is America ready for a cannabis commercial during the Super Bowl?” Dr. Hershberger said. He believes that an important trade-off exists for risks regardless of the degree to which marijuana is legalized.

“We have to approach this in the context of our current reality,” Dr. Carlson agreed. He, like Dr. Hershberger, cautioned that there are no simple answers.

Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson reported no potential conflicts of interest.

 

The risk curve of societal harm from marijuana when graphed from a policy of complete prohibition to one of unregulated access is U shaped, according to a panel of experts who participated in a workshop on the harms and benefits of cannabis at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

Based on more than 80 years of experience, it is clear that prohibition supports criminal activity but does not eliminate use, said Jason Hershberger, MD, chair of the department of psychiatry at Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center, New York. With progressive degrees of decriminalization, the harms to society associated with criminal distribution and the criminalization of use decreases, but they are replaced with increasing societal risks imposed by the availability of an intoxicating substance.

Ted Bosworth/MDedge News
(From left) Dr. Jason E. Hershberger, Dr. Stephan M. Carlson, Dr. Manuel Lopez-Leon, and Dr. Jose P. Vitor
“From a public health perspective, there is an inflection point somewhere along this curve,” Dr. Hershberger said.

Theoretically, one argument is that the inflection point occurs where cannabis has been decriminalized for medical indications but prohibited for recreational use. But this is a tenuous position. Clinicians, including psychiatrists, might support the use of cannabis to reduce stress, but it is well known that the pleasant intoxication provided by cannabis is relaxing – whether or not this is characterized as stress relief.

“The conversation has to start with the basic realization that cannabis is perceived by many people to have beneficial effects,” reported Stephan M. Carlson, MD, who also is affiliated with Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center. Based on his belief that marijuana, after alcohol and tobacco, may soon be the third legal drug where it isn’t already, “physicians have just a temporary role” in mediating the debate about medical legalization from a legal or political standpoint. Why? Because this part of the debate is growing irrelevant.

This does not mean medical indications or medical harms are not valid topics of discussion, Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson said. The problem is that recreational use is supplanting medical use as the central issue in making this drug available.

The road toward U.S. legalization started in 1996, when California voters approved the use of marijuana for medical indications. Other states followed. Then, in 2012, Colorado and Washington became the first states to approve the drug for recreational use. In total, 29 states now permit some form of legal use of marijuana. In addition, marijuana possession has been decriminalized in several states where it remains illegal.

 

 


“From the federal perspective, marijuana is still a Schedule I drug. This means that it is easier to conduct research on cocaine, which is a Schedule II drug, than it is on marijuana,” Dr. Hershberger said. While the current presidential administration has adopted a tougher stance on distribution and use of marijuana than the previous, more than 60% of Americans in surveys support decriminalization of marijuana, according to Dr. Hershberger. He suggested that the current acceptability of marijuana is the reason that a recent survey indicated that more U.S. high school seniors than ever before have tried marijuana.

In light of the perceptions that the marijuana ban was ineffective, that marijuana is acceptable, and that profits from marijuana sales and distributions have been going to criminals, depriving government of tax dollars, continued decriminalization appears to be inevitable, Dr. Hershberger said. However, he believes that complete deregulation poses important risk, including an inevitable increase in accidents produced by motor impairment. It is also reasonable to anticipate more substance use in vulnerable populations. The risk to the development of children and adolescents who are likely to gain easier access to cannabis is unknown.

For psychiatrists and other medical specialists who wish to participate in the debate about the degree to which marijuana is decriminalized, both Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson argued that a clear and realistic view of the landscape is essential.

“One of the reasons we are in this state we are in is that many people have declared the war on drugs a failure,” Dr. Hershberger said. Although he acknowledged that recognizing the limited efficacy of a marijuana ban is a reasonable starting point for discussion, he also expressed concern about large corporations being permitted to market cannabis in a way that obscures its risks or encourages use by those at greatest risk of harm, such as minors.
 

 


“We have to ask ourselves, is America ready for a cannabis commercial during the Super Bowl?” Dr. Hershberger said. He believes that an important trade-off exists for risks regardless of the degree to which marijuana is legalized.

“We have to approach this in the context of our current reality,” Dr. Carlson agreed. He, like Dr. Hershberger, cautioned that there are no simple answers.

Dr. Hershberger and Dr. Carlson reported no potential conflicts of interest.
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