Pubdate: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 Source: Walla Walla Union-Bulletin (WA) Copyright: 2014 Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Contact: http://www.union-bulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2619 Author: Robert H. Schaeffer ADDING TO 'AGONY AND ECSTASY' ARTICLE The article, "Agony and Ecstasy" appearing in the U-B Aug. 8 needs supplementation. Multiple recent scientific studies strongly suggest that the illegal drug, MDMA, Ecstasy, may have real and permanent value when used in conjunction with psychotherapy in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. The experiments needed to demonstrate this were long delayed by the political and public perception that any drug based on amphetamine was automatically bad and was therefore designated illegal, severely restricting any research that might demonstrate otherwise. The fact that methamphetamine, "Speed," is all bad does not mean its distant cousin MDMA is equally bad. In England this debate reached its head when Dr. David Nutt, the director of the Council on the Misuse of Drugs, was fired for publicly writing and stating the dangers of using Ecstasy were about equal to those of riding horseback. One benefit of the recent laws on marijuana use is the probability the user will get a standard dose of a quality product. Any user who trusts an illegal supplier is a fool. For example, most "street" peyote and mescaline contain neither of these drugs, but rather are a mixture of marijuana and whatever other psychedelics the dealer has in stock at the time. Illegal dealers lie! Notice in the media how often celebrities, "overdose" deaths are reported. Today, the scientific evidence strongly suggests that using marijuana before the human brain is fully developed, about the mid-twenties, is a bad idea. Of course, the dose and frequency of use matters, but how little or much is safe is not known. What is known that five "joints" a day for 10 or more years produces severe and permanent brain damage, but then a similar dose of alcohol is also bad. And there is nothing good that can be said for tobacco use. It is not known whether or not one joint per day for one year results in permanent damage to an 18-year-old. The excessive use of any substance including water, oxygen, aspirin or Tylenol can be dangerous and the age of the user does matter. For detailed knowledge concerning the total legal (alcohol and tobacco) and illegal drug scene, read: "Drugs Without the Hot Air" by Dr. David Nutt, available in a PB edition. His last chapter: "What Should I Tell My Kids About Drugs" is a masterpiece that should be read by all parents. See the Internet: drugscience.org.uk. We humans are social creatures, and generally children will model their behavior first of all on that of their parents or other adults with whom they have strong connections, then peers and gangs. They will do as these models do rather than what they are told to do or not do. Robert H. Schaeffer, M.D. (retired) Walla Walla - --- MAP posted-by: Matt