1.
In March 1999, the Institute of Medicine issued a report on various aspects of marijuana, including the
so-called, Gateway Theory (the theory that using marijuana leads people to use harder drugs like cocaine and heroin). The
IOM stated, "There is no conclusive evidence that the drug effects of marijuana are causally linked to the subsequent abuse
of other illicit drugs."
Source: Janet E. Joy, Stanley
J. Watson, Jr., and John A Benson, Jr., "Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base," Division of Neuroscience and Behavioral Research, Institute of Medicine (Washington, DC:
National Academy Press, 1999).
2. The
Institute of Medicine's 1999 report on marijuana explained that marijuana has been mistaken for a gateway drug in the past
because "Patterns in progression of drug use from adolescence to adulthood are strikingly regular. Because it is the most
widely used illicit drug, marijuana is predictably the first illicit drug most people encounter. Not surprisingly, most users
of other illicit drugs have used marijuana first. In fact, most drug users begin with alcohol and nicotine before marijuana
-- usually before they are of legal age."
Source: Janet E. Joy, Stanley
J. Watson, Jr., and John A Benson, Jr., "Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base," Division of Neuroscience and Behavioral Research, Institute of Medicine (Washington, DC:
National Academy Press, 1999).
3. The
2002 federal National Survey on Drug Use and Health provides an estimate of the age of first use of drugs. According to the
Survey, the mean age of first use of marijuana in the US in 2000 was 16.6 years. The mean age of first use of alcohol in 2000
was 16.2 years, and the mean age of first use of cigarettes that year was 16 years old.
Source: Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration, US Department of Health and Human Services, Results from the 2002 National Survey on
Drug Use and Health: National Findings (Rockville, MD: Office of Applied Studies, Sept. 2003), p. 233, Table H.35, p. 238,
Table H.40, p. 239, Table H.41.
4. The 2002 federal National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) reported
that:
"In 2002, the rate of current illicit drug use was approximately 8 times higher among youths who smoked cigarettes
(48.1 percent) than it was among youths who did not smoke cigarettes (6.2 percent) (Figure 2.11).
"Illicit drug use also
was associated with the level of alcohol use. Among youths who were heavy drinkers, 67.0 percent also were current illicit
drug users, whereas among nondrinkers, the rate was only 5.6 percent."
Source: Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration, US Department of Health and Human Services, Results from the 2002 National Survey on
Drug Use and Health: National Findings (Rockville, MD: Office of Applied Studies, Sept. 2003), p. 20.
5. Over
72 million Americans have used marijuana, yet for every 120 people who have ever tried marijuana, there is only one active,
regular user of cocaine.
Source: Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration, US Department of Health and Human Services, National Household Survey on Drug Abuse:
Population Estimates 1998 (Washington DC: US Department of Health and Human Services, 1999), pp. 19, 25, 31.
6. A
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association on cannabis and its possible role as a gateway drug found that "While
covariates differed between equations, early regular use of tobacco and alcohol emerged as the 2 factors most consistently
associated with later illicit drug use and abuse/dependence. While early regular alcohol use did not emerge as a significant
independent predictor of alcohol dependence, this finding should be treated with considerable caution, as our study did not
provide an optimal strategy for assessing the effects of early alcohol use."
Source: Lynskey, Michael T., PhD,
et al., "Escalation of Drug Use in Early-Onset Cannabis Users vs Co-twin Controls," Journal of the American Medical Association,
Vol. 289 No. 4, January 22/29, 2003, online at http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v289n4/rfull/joc21156.html, last accessed Jan. 31, 2003.
7. A
study in the Journal of the American Medical Association on cannabis and its possible role as a gateway drug concluded that
"While the findings of this study indicate that early cannabis use is associated with increased risks of progression to other
illicit drug use and drug abuse/dependence, it is not possible to draw strong causal conclusions solely on the basis of the
associations shown in this study."
Source: Lynskey, Michael T., PhD,
et al., "Escalation of Drug Use in Early-Onset Cannabis Users vs Co-twin Controls," Journal of the American Medical Association,
Vol. 289 No. 4, January 22/29, 2003, online at http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v289n4/rfull/joc21156.html, last accessed Jan. 31, 2003.
8. A study in the Journal of the American Medical Association on cannabis
and its possible role as a gateway drug concluded that "Other mechanisms that might mediate a causal association between early
cannabis use and subsequent drug use and drug abuse/dependence include the following:
"1. Initial experiences with cannabis,
which are frequently rated as pleasurable, may encourage continued use of cannabis and also broader experimentation.
"2.
Seemingly safe early experiences with cannabis may reduce the perceived risk of, and therefore barriers to, the use of other
drugs. For example, as the vast majority of those who use cannabis do not experience any legal consequences of their use,
such use may act to diminish the strength of legal sanctions against the use of all drugs.
"3. Alternatively, experience
with and subsequent access to cannabis use may provide individuals with access to other drugs as they come into contact with
drug dealers. This argument provided a strong impetus for the Netherlands to effectively decriminalize cannabis use in an
attempt to separate cannabis from the hard drug market. This strategy may have been partially successful as rates of cocaine
use among those who have used cannabis are lower in the Netherlands than in the United States."
Source: Lynskey, Michael T., PhD,
et al., "Escalation of Drug Use in Early-Onset Cannabis Users vs Co-twin Controls," Journal of the American Medical Association,
Vol. 289 No. 4, January 22/29, 2003, online at http://jama.ama-assn.org/issues/v289n4/rfull/joc21156.html, last accessed Jan. 31, 2003.
9. In
2002 the English government published research on the initiation of drug use and criminal offending by young people in Britain.
According to the study, "After applying these methods, there is very little remaining evidence of any causal gateway effect.
For example, even if soft/medium drugs (cannabis, amphetamines, LSD, magic mushrooms, amyl nitrite) could somehow be abolished
completely, the true causal link with hard drugs (crack, heroin, methadone) is found to be very small. For the sort of reduction
in soft drug use that might be achievable in practice, the predicted causal effect on the demand for hard drugs would be negligible.
Although there is stronger evidence of a gateway between soft drugs and ecstasy/cocaine, it remains small for practical purposes.
My interpretation of the results of this study is that true gateway effects are probably very small and that the association
between soft and hard drugs found in survey data is largely the result of our inability to observe all the personal characteristics
underlying individual drug use. From this viewpoint, the decision to reclassify cannabis seems unlikely to have damaging future
consequences."
Source: Pudney, Stephen, "Home Office
Research Study 253: The road to ruin? Sequences of initiation into drug use and offending by young people in Britain" (London,
England: Home Office Research, Development, and Statistics Directorate, December 2002), p. vi.
10. The World Health Organization's
investigation into the gateway effect of marijuana stated emphatically that the theory that marijuana use by adolescents leads
to heroin use is the least likely of all hypotheses.
Source: Hall, W., Room, R. &
Bondy, S., WHO Project on Health Implications of Cannabis Use: A Comparative Appraisal of the Health and Psychological Consequences
of Alcohol, Cannabis, Nicotine and Opiate Use, August 28, 1995 (Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization, March 1998).
11. The World Health Organization
noted the effects of prohibition in its March 1998 study, when it stated that "exposure to other drugs when purchasing cannabis
on the black market, increases the opportunity to use other illicit drugs."
Source: Hall, W., Room, R. &
Bondy, S., WHO Project on Health Implications of Cannabis Use: A Comparative Appraisal of the Health and Psychological Consequences
of Alcohol, Cannabis, Nicotine and Opiate Use, August 28, 1995 (Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization, March 1998).
12. According to CASA (National
Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse), there is no proof that a causal relationship exists between cigarettes, alcohol,
marijuana and other drugs. Basic scientific and clinical research establishing causality does not exist.
Source: Merrill, J.C. &
Fox, K.S., Cigarettes, Alcohol, Marijuana: Gateways to Illicit Drug Use, Introduction (New York, NY: National Center on Addiction
and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, October 1994).
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Updated: Thursday, 24-Mar-2005 08:54:28 PST ~ Accessed: 51354
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