There are at least 10 drugs that are more deadly than
marijuana, including some that are legal, such as alcohol and nicotine, a new
study by researchers in Germany and Canada finds.
In
fact, drinking alcohol — the deadliest drug on the list — is about 100 times
more dangerous than using marijuana, the scientists concluded in the study,
which was based on data from animal studies and published Jan. 30 in the
journal Scientific Reports.
Marijuana
is labeled as a Schedule I drug in the United States, meaning that under
federal law, it is illegal and cannot be used for medical purposes (although some states have legalized its use).
The
new findings echo the results of previous studies, and lawmakers should take
this research into consideration when drafting new policies, the researchers
said.
The low risk that marijuana
poses to people's health suggests that the drug should be strictly regulated
but not prohibited, the researchers wrote in the study.
But
other experts say more analysis is needed in order to make a conclusion about
marijuana's full impact. For instance, studies should consider the effects of
the drug on people's behavior, as well as the impact it has on society, some
researchers say.
Lethality
is not the only form of dangerousness. The lethality of a substance is absolutely
relevant to the making of public policy, but it is only one part" of the
bigger picture.
In
the study, the researchers calculated the health risk of each drug by looking
at a measure called the "margin of exposure" (MOE), which is a ratio
that compares the approximate amount of a drug needed to kill a person to the
amount that people usually take.
In essence, the MOE rates
the likelihood that someone could take a lethal overdose of a drug: When the
ratio is low, the drug is deadlier.
But
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in marijuana, had an MOE
higher than 100, meaning the chances of a lethal overdose are slim, the
researchers said.
Alcohol, heroin, cocaine and
nicotine are considered high-risk drugs because their MOEs are less than 10,
the researchers found. Other drugs — including MDMA, methamphetamine, methadone
(a narcotic often used to treat heroin addiction), amphetamine (a stimulant
that treats narcolepsy and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) and
diazepam (brand name Valium) — were a little less risky, with MOEs between 10
and 100.
However,
there are several caveats to the findings. First, the numbers for the MOE are
based on animal data, as it's not ethical or safe to test drug lethality in
people.
Also, the MOEs are calculated based on the use of each drug
individually, whereas in real life, it's common for people to use several drugs
at the same time, the researchers said.
Moreover,
the MOE doesn't factor in other health risks associated with drugs, such as
infections from unclean syringes, the researchers said in the study.
For
the most part, the new study supports earlier work on the risk of death from
drugs. It's surprising that heroin is less dangerous than alcohol, but not that
marijuana is relatively low-risk.
But policymakers need to factor in
dependence and addiction. Drugs can also impair decision making, driving
ability and productivity, and children may experience abuse and neglect if
their parents are dependent users of legal drugs.
Emerging
evidence also suggests that marijuana
use may be associated with heart problems.
For instance, two young
men in Germany died
after taking marijuana, according to a 2014 study in the journal Forensic
Science International. Other research has found that marijuana use can change
brain structure, and it's unknown what effects these changes might
have.
Although
the MOE values are interesting, more research is needed to determine the full
impact of marijuana on health and society.
A
drug's lethality has to be part of an analysis that considers these other
things also.
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