Pubdate: Fri, 10 Nov 2000 Source: Ukiah Daily Journal (CA) Copyright: 2000, Ukiah Daily Journal Contact: 590 S. School St. Ukiah, CA 95482 Fax: (707) 468-5780 Website: http://www.ukiahdailyjournal.com/ Author: Peter Keegan MARIJUANA CANCER LINK DISPUTED To the editor: Your lead article on Sunday (Oct. 29) seems to imply that marijuana causes lung cancer. Glenda Anderson reports that crime fighter Bob Nishiyama thinks some of the medical reasons for marijuana use are bogus because they have been issued for alcoholism: "I'm a little lost why that's good thing. So you get lung cancer, but not cirrhosis." There is no evidence showing higher rates of lung cancer in people who use marijuana. Mr. Nishiyama has confused tobacco with marijuana. While there is overwhelming evidence that tobacco use causes heart disease, emphysema, and cancers of all type, that has never been shown for marijuana. An average cigarette smoker, uses 100-200 inhalations a day for decades, and faces a 50-fold increase in lung cancer. Marijuana users don't even have to smoke to enjoy it. Many chose to eat it or drink it as a tea. And if a person does chose to smoke, a typical marijuana smoker will use just a few inhalations. Moreover, liver disease (whether from alcoholism, common viral infections, congenital defects, or bile duct obstruction) is often accompanied by intractable nausea and anorexia for which marijuana is highly therapeutic. So, to answer Mr. Nishiyama's quandary, marijuana use is a good thing because it reduces their suffering. I also felt reporter Glenda Anderson was misleading in Friday's issue when she reported comments from the Prop. G debate out of context: "Dr. Keegan's also not concerned about teenagers using marijuana..."For the record, let me be clear. I do not think teenagers should use drugs of any type. But, regardless of what I, or any parent, wants, teenagers are using drugs. The Public Health Dept. surveyed high school juniors in Mendocino County in 1993 and 60 percent had used drugs, other than alcohol, to get high. In the class of 1999 at Ukiah, 60 percent of the graduating honor students had used marijuana. That is our reality. Clearly, "just say no" and "zero tolerance" are not effective. In fact, to tell teenagers "you can't," often is counterproductive because of their natural rebelliousness. As parents and teachers, we have a responsibility to be truthful, which we currently are not. Marijuana is a mild intoxicant, has no lethal overdose potential, little risk of addiction, and no long-term health consequences. By way of comparison, 40,000 people die from alcohol every year (not counting auto accidents), lethal overdoses are common, some people become fiercely addicted, and long term use can cause liver failure, pancreatitis, heart failure, and bleeding ulcers to name just a few of the ugly health consequences of alcoholism. Tobacco products cause 400,000 premature deaths every year, are highly addictive, and the health hazards are legion. Heroin, amphetamines, and cocaine are also readily available to Ukiah youth and they all can result in lethal overdose, addiction, and adverse health effects. As parents, we want our young people to be safe. The halcyon days of yore are long gone, and the risks of modern living are real. Safety demands that young people be provided with truthful information about the risks they face. When we lie to them about marijuana, we completely lose our credibility. As a result, youth don't believe our teaching about alcohol and heroin with unfortunate lethal consequences. A person can use marijuana and also be a productive and useful citizen. My comment that you can smoke marijuana and be president of the United States was not just a reference to Clinton, but also acknowledges that our current candidates, G.W. Bush and Al Gore, have both used marijuana. Peter Keegan, Ukiah - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D