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Medicinal Marijuana A Wonder Drug Or Danger

Medicinal Marijuana: A Wonder Drug Or Danger To Society? Essay, Research Paper


Cannabis sativa, most commonly known as marijuana, has been used for recreational and


medical purposes for thousands of years. Many have smoked marijuana to experience the


drug’s psychedelic effects, while others use the drug to treat various illnesses and pain.


Within the past century, however, the drug’s medicinal value has come under much


scrutiny. Those supporting the legalization of marijuana feel that the government has


withheld a soothing drug from those who are suffering from severe illnesses, and as a


result, these advocates find the government to be uncompassionate to those in pain.


Nevertheless, those against the legalization of this drug contest that marijuana has


considerable side effects and offers no medicinal benefits to society. These opponents


encourage the government’s political involvement in the controversy because they feel


that, with government funded experiments, the drug can be proven ineffective and unsafe.


The best option for today’s society, however, is to continue the ban of medicinal


marijuana. The legalization of this drug for medical purposes can only lead to future drug


addiction, negative side effects, and susceptibility to further damage through recreational


use.


Essayist Sally Satel suggests that instead of legalizing marijuana, or any


other drug, that the best answer is force. She gives a well known example of celebrities


and drug use, most recently, the legal problems of Robert Downey Jr. The judge who


sentenced him to six months in prison stated, “I’m going to incarcerate you in a way you


won’t like, but it may save your life” (Satel, “For Addicts, Force Is the Best Medicine”,


101). Satel, a psychiatrist who treats drug addicts, feels that by keeping them in


treatment, the legal consent – whether it is forced or not – may in fact keep the addicts


alive (101). She convinced that the payoff is colossal. These addicts learn the “social


competence, trust in others and optimism about the future that are the prerequisites for a


life without drugs” (103). Not only do the patients themselves have a positive effect from


the treatment, but the community sees results as well. “Numerous large-scale cost-benefit


analyses reveal that every dollar spent on drug treatment saves between $2 and $7 on law


enforcement, corrections, health care, lost productivity, and welfare” (103). With this in


mind, it is far more conceivable to force treatment on drug abusers, rather than consenting


to their demands by legalizing marijuana, or any other drug.


Many have argued about the physical dependence marijuana may cause to those


who use the drug. Advocates of legalized marijuana claim that the drug is not addictive,


despite much opposition. According to Ron Kadden, “A lot of people think it’s not


addictive. [Users] have been told by treatment professionals and friends that they


couldn’t really be addicted to marijuana” (Boyce). Evidence shows otherwise, however,


and several studies have been conducted to prove that marijuana is, in fact, an addictive


drug. Steven Goldberg of the National Institute on Drug Abuse conducted one of these


studies, in which he found that even lab monkeys would seek out marijuana’s active


chemical, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which causes addiction, and the monkeys learned


to give themselves as many as thirty injections within an hour session; however, many


remain unconvinced by scientific data (Boyce). If this is so, can personal experience with


the addictiveness of the drug change the mind of those who stand firm in the idea that


marijuana has no physical dependence? The Director at Haight-Ashbury Detox Center,


Darry Inaba, asserts:


The main problem we’re dealing with today is that today’s potent form of


marijuana is causing a lot more problems than we saw in the 1960s…by the late ‘80s, we


started seeing people coming in, everyone of them on their own volition saying, ‘Help


me, I want to stop smoking pot. It is causing me these problems…I want to stop and I


can’t stop.’ At our program in San Francisco, we now have about one hundred patients


every month who are in treatment specifically for marijuana addiction. So many who


claim that marijuana is harmless have to sit down and listen to those people who are the


wounded, what we call the walking wounded or the casualties from marijuana use. (Inaba,


Cohen, and Holstein 247-248)


Should physicians be able to prescribe a drug that will cause the patient not only


to suffer from the disease that needs treatment, but also from a drug addiction?


Physicians are supposed to aid in the treatment of a patient, not deter their recovery by


causing yet another problem!


Although advocates of legalized marijuana argue that marijuana is an effective


treatment to the sick, many organizations strongly oppose this concept. Both the National


Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Health maintain that there are better, safer


drugs available to treat illnesses (Lapey, “Marijuana as Medicine”). In over twelve


thousand studies on marijuana, the drug has never been proven to be effective for


treatment (Lapey, “Marijuana is NOT”); nevertheless, this controversial debate over


legalizing marijuana for medical use parallels with another dilemma in history. Kevin


Costello, MD, reflects upon a time when the United States was arguing over the


legalization of Laetrile, a drug that was not FDA approved but was believed to be an


effective cancer treatment (McNaughton). He states, “The public made a great outcry that


the medical establishment was withholding a miracle drug. Controlled testing


subsequently proved that Laetrile was useless for cancer and would even be harmful”


(McNaughton). Just as Laetrile was proven to be an ineffective means of treatment,


studies have proven marijuana to be just as unsuccessful. The safety and effectiveness


of marijuana, as a therapeutic medicine, has consistently been contested. If medical


treatment continues to be based on safe and useful drugs, marijuana will remain illegal.


In conclusion, state efforts to legalize marijuana, for any purpose, has only sent


younger generations the message that marijuana use is safe and acceptable. Many are


unable to comprehend why it is acceptable for marijuana to be legalized for medical


purposes but illegal for recreational use. This confusion is legitimate, because both the


recreational and medical use of marijuana pose a threat to the user. Several people are


beginning to realize that marijuana–a drug that cannot pass federal inspection quotas to


become a legalized medicine–can only be a threat to the state of a patient and, therefore,


are able to acknowledge that there are safer and more effective drugs available to treat the


disease at hand.


Bibliography


Boyce, Nell. “Hooked on Hash.” New Scientist 2000. 1 November 2000 .


Inaba, Darryl, William Cohen, and Michael E. Holstein. Uppers, Downers, All


Arounders. 3rd ed. Ashland: CNS, 1997.


Lapey, Janet. “Marijuana as Medicine Refuted By NIH Scientists.” Drug Watch


International 1993. 1 November 2000 .


—. “Marijuana is NOT a Medicine.” League Against Intoxicants 1998. 1


November 2000 .


“Medical Marijuana Briefing Paper 2000: The Need to Change State and Federal Law.”


Marijuana Privacy Project 2000. 1 November 2000 .


McNaughton, Marie T. “Medical Marijuana.” 1998. 1 November 2000 .


Satel, Sally “For Addicts, Force is the Best Medicine” Rottenburg, Annette T.


Elements of Argument. 1994 Bedford/St. Martin’s, 101-103.

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