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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: falk@peregrine.Eng.Sun.COM (Ed Falk)
- Subject: Lies in the war on drugs
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.091524.15588@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 09:15:24 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 240
-
- The Hartford Courant
-
- "Untruths, unreliable data create obstacles in war on drugs."
-
- It is a stark message designed to persuade youths to stay away from
- marijuana.
-
- And it is a lie.
-
- The narrator tells television viewers they are watching the brain waves
- of a normal 14-year-old. As he speaks, squiggly lines with high peaks
- show an obviously active brain.
-
- The picture changes: The lines flatten. These, the narrator says, are
- the brain waves of a 14-year-old on marijuana.
-
- The problem with this national television advertisement is that the
- flatter "brain waves" are not those of a teenager on dope; they are not
- brain waves at all. The electroencephalograph was not hooked up to
- anyone.
-
- It is not just brain waves that are being manipulated in the war
- against drugs. Truth has been a casualty in other areas as well.
-
- For example:
-
- A study cited by presidents and business leaders to demonstrate the
- effect of drug use on worker productivity has no scientific validity
- according to the organization that conducted it.
-
- No one has been able to produce another widely quoted study that
- purportedly showed drug users cost companies more in worker's
- compensation claims and medical benefits.
-
- A third study, used to show that marijuana could cause long-term
- impairment, was improperly conducted and reached conclusions no other
- study has been able to duplicated, according to one of its authors.
-
- [article goes on to say that drugs are bad but that lying about it
- destroys the credibility of the anti-drug crusade.]
-
- "Part of the problem we have as drug educators today is that kids don't
- believe us," said Dr. Lester Grinspoon, an associate professor of
- psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School who has researched the effects
- of marijuana.
-
- "They've been told for so long that marijuana is very bad for them and
- then they go off to college and see a brilliant English major that
- smokes dope and nothing's happened to his or her brain or heart. Then
- they use it themselves and discover it's the least harmful illegal
- drug. So they say that maybe they've been lied to about cocaine or
- PCP, too."
-
- But such questions are not the foremost concern of the organization
- that created the brain-wave advertisement. The Partnership for a
- Drug-Free America wants, above all else, to prevent people from using
- drugs.
-
- Theresa Grant, public information director for the nonprofit
- organization, said she doesn't see any problem with the ad.
-
- "The marijuana brain-wave commercial was one of the ads that we used as
- a fact, rather than a fear-inducing ad," Grant said. later, she
- acknowledged: "It was a simulation. They manipulated the machine. It
- was not attached to any person. It was not scientific. At the time we
- created it in 1987, we were told that it was an appropriate
- representation," by the government's National Institute on Drug Abuse.
-
- ... She emphasized that the partnership has not conceded that the
- brain-wave representation was inaccurate ...
-
- "It's a flat lie," said Grinspoon. "Marijuana has no clinically
- significant effect on the electroencephalograph." ...
-
- Citing a Harvard Medical School study, he said, "Nobody has been able
- to demonstrate one iota of brain damage from smoking marijuana."
-
- Social 'Studies'
-
- Last year President Bush declared that "drug abuse among American
- workers costs businesses anywhere from $60 billion to $100 billion a
- year in lost productivity, absenteeism, drug-related accidents, medical
- claims and theft."
-
- Where did he get those number?
-
- Bush, and President Reagan before him, have based their comments about
- drugs and productivity on a study conducted by the Research Triangle
- Institute, a nonprofit research organization near Raleigh, N.C.,
- according to Henrick J. Harwood, who led the study and now is senior
- policy analyst in the White House drug policy office. ...
-
- "It was an inexpensive study done with inadequate data," said Reid
- Maness, senior manager of communications for Research Triangle
- Institute. "Unfortunately, there hasn't been attempt since then to do
- anything better. This still remains the most recent and best study of
- its type.
-
- "When we see people being critical about it, we don't get too upset.
- RTI would agree that the study does not have a lot of precision. We
- never claimed that it did," Maness said.
-
- The study concluded:
-
- o People who had *ever* been heavy marijuana users cost the nation
- $34.2 billion in diminished worker productivity in 1980.
-
- o Adding the costs of drug-related health problems, crime and
- accidents -- figures that exist only in very rough estimates -- the
- study concluded that all drug abuse, excluding alcohol, cost the
- country $47 billion in 1980.
-
- How did the institute come up with its figures?
-
- Using statistics from a 1982 household survey by the National Institute
- on Drug Abuse, the institute compared the average income for households
- in which one person admitted to having every used marijuana daily to
- the average for households in which no one admitted to having ever used
- marijuana daily.
-
- Households with former heavy smokers of marijuana had an average income
- 27.9 percent lower than similar households in which marijuana had not
- been used heavily, the institute said.
-
- The study concluded that, when the figures were extrapolated to the
- general population, marijuana abuse caused an estimated loss in income
- of $34.2 billion in 1980. In turn, the researchers equated the reduced
- income with reduced productivity. ...
-
- "The study is worthless," said Dr. John P. Morgan, medical professor
- and head of the pharmacology department at the City University of New
- York Medical School. "It is obviously absurd. It has to do with the
- fact that NIDA is functioning chiefly as a minister of propaganda in
- the war on drugs."
-
- The study did not prove any relationship between marijuana use and
- reduced household income. Despite its conclusion that "The
- [productivity] loss due to marijuana abuse was estimated at $34.2
- billion for 1980," the study elsewhere notes that the reduced income
- was not necessarily a result of marijuana use.
-
- Even if it were, income does not equal productivity.
-
- In an article in the University of Kansas Law Review, Morgan write that
- if income were the same as productivity, then "a judge is less
- productive than a practicing lawyer, a medical school professor is less
- productive than a practicing physician, a farmer is less productive
- than a florist and an elementary school teacher is less productive than
- an owner of a daycare center."
-
- The study arrived at one particularly curious conclusion:
-
- People who were *currently* abusing any illegal drug cost the nation
- nothing in diminished worker productivity
-
- A 34-year-old who told researchers in 1982 that he had smoked marijuana
- every day during the summer of 1966 and had not touched an illegal drug
- since would be classified as a worker whose productivity was
- significantly diminished by drug use.
-
- But the classification for diminished productivity applied only when
- someone *quit* smoking marijuana, not if someone continued to use
- marijuana, cocaine or heroin.
-
- Harwood acknowledged this.
-
- "We looked at current drug users vs. others and found no significant
- difference [in productivity] between current users and never-users," he
- said.
-
- The study that wasn't.
-
- Shocking anti-drug statistics seem always to make headlines, regardless
- of what they are based upon.
-
- In 1983, Dr. Sidney Cohen, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA,
- wrote in the Drug Abuse and Alcoholism Newsletter that drug users were
- five times as likely to file workers' compensation claims and that they
- received three times the average level of benefits for illness.
-
- His source was a study purportedly done by the Firestone Tire and
- Rubber Co. Many other drug fighters, particularly people in favor of
- widespread drug testing of employees, have quoted either the Firestone
- study or the newsletter edited by Cohen, who has since died.
-
- In fact, there appears to have been no such study.
-
- "About three people have asked me for that study," said the Firestone
- medical director, Dr. E. Gates Morgan. "I'm unaware of it. We had an
- [employee assistance program] man with us, but left the company in 1983
- and died in 1987. I've looked all over for the stuff he wrote, but we
- don't have any copies of it at all." ...
-
- A life of their own
-
- Other widely quoted studies have even larger margins of error -- but
- you wouldn't know that by listening to the people who quote them.
-
- "Marijuana does not wear off in a couple of hours," said Rosanna
- Creighton, president of the nonpartisan lobbying group "Citizens for a
- Drug-free Oregon."
-
- "The pleasure high is gone, but the effect it has ... on motor skills,
- eye-to-hand coordination, peripheral vision ... is not gone. A
- Stanford University study showed that 24 hours after smoking marijuana,
- the ability of airplane pilots was impaired."
-
- Creighton was referring to a 1985 study paid for by the National
- Institute on Drug Abuse and the Veterans Administration Medical
- Research Service. It has been used to show that even casual marijuana
- use is dangerous -- despite many government studies that have concluded
- the opposite. ...
-
- The study said that although the pilots were unaware they were
- impaired, their marijuana-induced errors could easily lead to airplane
- crashes.
-
- But a co-author of the study is not confident of those findings.
-
- "The results of the study were suggestive, non conclusive," said Dr.
- Von Otto Leirer, an experimental psychologist. "We didn't have the
- appropriate controls for the experiment. That was a real serious
- problem."
-
- Leirer said a follow-up study, using the proper controls and methods,
- was conducted. That study was published in December, but attracted
- little notice.
- ...
-
- In the past 20 years, studies have shown marijuana to cause brain
- damage, paranoia, early senility, heart malfunction and sexual
- problems, Grinspoon said. In every case, he said, follow-up studies
- failed to confirm that marijuana caused any of those problems.
-
- --
- -ed falk, sun microsystems
- sun!falk, falk@sun.com
- card-carrying ACLU member.
-
-
-