Pubdate: Tue, 10 Mar 1998 Date: 10/03/1998 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Author: J. Thomas Ungerleider MD Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98.n842.a04.html Note: Dr. Ungerleider is Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry UCLA Medical Center Scott Gottlieb (Opinion, Sept. 27) suggests that making marijuana available medically will result in U.S. physicians regularly abusing marijuana, causing the "stoned age" of medicine. That certainly has never happened with physicians prescribing morphine and the other opiates, cocaine and even methamphetamine. Gottlieb cites the British experience, where medical use of marijuana is encouraged, and he alleges that "46% of medical students in England have tried marijuana at least once, while 10% claimed to smoke one joint or more per week." He connects this with Britain's early efforts to legalize recreational marijuana use. Interestingly, we have data on American medical students' use of marijuana in 1971, before anyone thought about its medical uses. Fully 72% of medical students surveyed in a Southern California medical school had tried marijuana at least once, 18% smoked at least once weekly and over 40% used at least once monthly, far more than our British colleagues (Ungerleider, et al., Journal of the American Medical Assn., 1971). Before 1975 in California, being "under the influence of" marijuana was a felony; conviction resulted in a minimum mandatory sentence of 90 days in jail. Thus the high use was despite draconian laws. J. THOMAS UNGERLEIDER MD Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry UCLA Medical Center