While the anti-cannabis lobby continues with its irrational witch-hunt, the information exists in abundance, which proves the information to contradict certain health claims has existed in the public domain for many decades. Since the advent of the Internet, only now are people empowered to make decisions on drug use, based on evidence and fact, as opposed to the scare mongering tactics the United States uses daily to bolster its failing argument against cannabis use.
For instance, concerned about the reports of chromosome breakages as a result of the use of marijuana and LSD, the National Institute on Drug Abuse convened special conferences on the subject in 1973 and 1974.
Over 30 years ago they concluded that "it is still doubtful whether cannabis is a danger to human genetics and reproductive processes, under the conditions and in the doses commonly used by marijuana smokers."
Durga Mata - Paradise Seeds
Supporters of this conclusion point out that if there were a link between marijuana and birth defects, the millions of marijuana users in America and elsewhere would by now have given birth to large numbers of deformed babies. Common sense really.
The reason for the concern is that several studies have indeed suggested such a link. The best known is an article by Morton A. Stenchever, an obstetrician at the University of Utah, in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology in 1974.
Stenchever claimed that a group of twenty women and twenty-nine men who used marijuana had almost three times as many chromosome breaks as a control group that did not use marijuana. More frighteningly, such chromosome damage did not appear to be related to the frequency or the quantity of marijuana smoked.
Critics of the study point out that Stenchever did not take into account what other drugs the subjects may have been using; caffeine, aspirin, and Valium are all capable of inflicting chromosome damage. They also point out that even if marijuana does cause chromosome breaks, there is no evidence that such breakages will in turn cause birth defects.
Here, as in other cases, different studies produce different results.
Dr. Warren N Nichols of the Institute for Medical Research in Camden, New Jersey, checked the chromosomes of twenty-four occasional marijuana smokers and found them to be healthy. The subjects were then given measured doses of marijuana for either five or twelve days and their chromosomes checked again; they were still healthy.
And the Jamaica study found that long-term marijuana smokers actually had a lower rate of chromosome damage than an equivalent group of nonusers.
It is still not clear whether marijuana represents a danger to pregnant women. Research with rats suggests that if the dosage in rodents could be mathematically extrapolated to dosages in human beings, a woman would have to smoke over a thousand joints a day before the size of her baby would be affected.
Whilst we would never condone taking any kind of drug during pregnancy, women who have perhaps inadvertantly smoked cannabis prior to finding out they were pregnant, have little to worry about, but a chat with your doctor should allay any fears once and for all.
Adapted from an original document written by William Novak http://www.psychedelic-library.org
Canna Zine - Daily zine for the global cannabis scene - Join us!
Set up in February 2007, the Canna Zine is the first-in-the-world news agency dedicated to the global issues surrounding cannabis and hemp. To post your free cannabis or hemp press release, sign up for a free account on http://pr.cannazine.co.uk , post your news release, and the Canna Zine will do the rest.
Canna Zine - more 'evolution' than revolution! A new era in postitive response communications.
If you have an article or a blog post you would like to show to the world via the giant Google News machine, drop us a line and let us help you show it.