The Boston Phoenix Comments On
The Drug Czars Position On IOM Report -- Top Notch
(Marijuananews note: This is really first rate
journalism.)General doubts: Sparking up the medical-marijuana debate with drug
czar Barry McCaffrey
From The Boston Phoenix May 6 - 13, 1999
www.phx.com
http://www.phx.com/archive/features/99/05/06/DRUG_WAR.html
by Jason Gay DRUG WAR writer
Theres a thick cloud of smoke trailing US drug czar General Barry McCaffrey these
days: a recent government-funded report on medical marijuana that concluded, among other
things, that marijuana possesses "potential therapeutic value" for people
suffering from cancer, AIDS wasting, and other serious illnesses.
Released in March, the $896,000 report, directed by the National Academy of
Sciences Institute of Medicine and authorized by McCaffrey himself, was widely seen
as embarrassing to the drug czar, who had previously derided medical marijuana as a
"cruel hoax that sounds like something out of a Cheech and Chong show."
Doh. After piling on the rhetoric, General McCaffrey, whose official title is
Director of the White Houses Office of National Drug Control Policy, now finds
himself spinning and backpedaling at the same time. While gently praising the IOM report,
he plays down its conclusions about therapeutic effectiveness, and continues to insist
that medical marijuana is a "peripheral issue" in the national drug-policy
debate.
"I think hes shuffling pretty fast," says Tom
Clark, an epidemiologist with Health Addictions Research, Inc., a Boston-based drug-abuse
research group. "Hes poking his way around various minefields, because the IOM
reports findings are not what he wanted to hear."
Critics such as Clark believe that McCaffreys hesitancy to embrace
marijuanas potential as medicine undermines his credibility with the public, which
is increasingly supportive of medical marijuana. Surveys have consistently shown that
between 60 and 80 percent of Americans back legalization for medical purposes. Voters
in seven states have approved measures legalizing medical marijuana, with more states
expected to put it to a vote this November.
In other words, Americas most significant drug discussion is already
progressingwith or without the assistance of the countrys highest-ranking drug
official.
"McCaffreys forcing the [medical-marijuana] issue downstream to states and
communities that have to deal with reality, and not bullshit," says Michael Cutler, a
Brookline attorney who coordinates the Voluntary Committee of Lawyers, an organization of
law-enforcement officials opposed to current national drug policies. "Hes
attempting to stop the conversation, but the conversation is happening all around him.
Hes making himself more and more irrelevant."
McCaffrey doesnt see it this way, of course. Last Thursday,
April 29, in the midst of a day-long visit to Boston that included speeches at
Harvard and Suffolk Universities, McCaffrey told the Phoenix that time will show hes
actually been receptive to medical marijuana. He said he supports the IOM reports
recommendation that the government promote the creation of alternative delivery systems to
smoked marijuana, such as inhalers, pills, patches, and gels. In the interim, McCaffrey
said, he also intends to permit limited, carefully monitored studies of terminally ill
patients who smoke marijuana for relief.
"Two years from now," McCaffrey said, "when I leave office and you give
me a polygraph at that time, I will pass the polygraph test that [asks me] Did I
embrace the report and move to implement its findings?"
See
Dying AIDS Patient
Peter McWilliams Demands Drug Czar McCaffrey Implement Medical Marijuana Recommendations
of National Academy of Sciences Institutes of Medicine Report
Still, this drug czar isnt about to belly up to the bong. During a brief
interview after his Harvard speech, McCaffrey chose to stress the IOM reports
warning that smoking marijuana could lead to respiratory illness and other diseases. He
maintained that the report didnt find marijuana to have anything more than mild
pain-relief capabilities, saying theres "no indication that theres
anything in marijuana that has curative powers." Finally, and most vehemently,
McCaffrey disputed suggestions that the report dismisses the long-held theory that
marijuana serves as a "gateway" to other, harder drugs.
"The report was quite clearit said you cant demonstrate a causal
linkage between smoking a lot of pot in grade school and injecting heroin in your 30s, but
the statistical correlations are overwhelming," said McCaffrey. "And the report
did say that if you want to see the statistical predictors [of hard drug use], early and
extensive marijuana use is one of them."
See
The Wall Street
Journal Responds To The IOM Report
By Having Califano Defend The "Gateway Theory"
Comments like these only frustrate McCaffreys critics, who see the drug czar, on
the defensive because of the report, twisting its conclusions in order to dilute its
impact. "The facts have shifted, and now hes shifting his arguments to
fit," says Michael Cutler.
See
www.vcl.org
and Important Cases
Take McCaffreys comments about the statistical correlations between youthful
marijuana smoking and later hard-drug use, Cutler says. Such neat correspondences are red
meat for marijuana skeptics, no doubt, but theyre not necessarily meaningful. To
borrow an oft-used example, the majority of adults who use motorcycles rode bikes as
children. Does that mean that children who ride bikes are more likely to ride motorcycles
as adults than children who do not? Probably. But few would suggest that bicycles are a
"gateway" to motorcycle use; many other factors are involved in such a
complicated decision.
Cutler jokes that the majority of adult drug users were probably breast-feddoes
that make breast milk a "gateway" to drugs? "Correlation is not
causation," he says. (Cutler and many other drug-policy
reformers argue that if theres any meaningful connection between marijuana use and
hard drugs, its the fact that prohibition puts the marijuana user in closer contact
with the users and sellers of other illegal drugs, thereby increasing the risk that he or
she may try them.) But none of these statistical correlations are grave enough to warrant
denying medical marijuana to people who are sick.
McCaffrey is more on target when he says the IOM report didnt conclusively find
"curative" powers in marijuana, but again, thats far from saying the drug
doesnt have any medical utility (which is what McCaffrey was arguing before the IOM
report was released). Is the lack of "curative" powers a reason to prohibit a
drug from being used? Plenty of commonly used medications, particularly analgesics, do not
"cure" anything but are valued because they reduce suffering. Says Tom Clark,
"If marijuana isnt curative, its palliative, and thats certainly
reason for someone to use a drug."
But its McCaffreys noisemaking on marijuana smoking
that especially troubles his critics. Lester Grinspoon, a Harvard Medical School professor
of psychiatry and author of such books as Marihuana, the Forbidden Medicine (Yale
University Press), was asked to review the IOM report prior to its release.
See www.rxmarihuana.com
Calling it "embarrassingly timid," Grinspoon says that although there are
legitimate health risks associated with long-term marijuana smoking, such concerns are
overblown when it comes to medical marijuana use. Its hard to convince patients in
the throes of cancer or AIDS that smoking marijuana will bring them serious harm, he says,
especially because these patients rarely use more than one or two marijuana cigarettes a
day. "Are we really worried about that?" asks Grinspoon.
Grinspoon and other critics believe that objections to smoked marijuana merely give
cover to politicians like McCaffrey, who can now pass the buck to the FDA and the
pharmaceutical industry to explore "alternative delivery systems" such as
inhalers. But here lies the rub, as Joshua Wolf Shenk recently noted in an essay in
Harpers: its unlikely that the pharmaceutical industry will be in much of a
hurry to replicate something that is already effective, reasonably inexpensive, and
readily available, even if its available only as an illegal substance.
"Opponents of medical marijuana claim that they simply want all medicines to be
approved by the FDA, but they know that drug companies have little incentive to overcome
the regulatory and financial obstacles for a plant that cant be patented,"
Shenk writes. "The FDA is the tail, not the dog."
McCaffrey has shown hes capable of taking difficult positions as the
countrys drug czar. A much-decorated soldier, he admirably admonishes his colleagues
in the enforcement business to drop their tired "war on drugs" jargon; McCaffrey
prefers likening the nations drug-abuse problem to a "cancer." He candidly
admits that attacking merely the supply side of drug abuse is fruitless; he has vastly
increased federal spending on drug treatment, rehabilitation, and education (though, as
his critics point out, federal money spent on interdiction has risen proportionately over
the same period).
On the issue of medical marijuana, however, McCaffrey continues to act with the wary
suspicion of a highway cop. In Boston, he reiterated his long-held belief that, for some, the medical-marijuana debate is a front for full legalization.
"Im not paid to be naive," McCaffrey said. "So Im watching the
backfield in motion."
Theres no doubt that some proponents of medical marijuana support legalization,
but does that justify keeping it from sick people who, as the IOM report clearly states,
find it useful? McCaffreys critics note that the drug czar, despite his
pronouncements about embracing the IOM report, has yet to back off his pledge to prosecute
physicians who supply marijuana to their patients, even in states where voters have
approved its medical use. Nor does he show any signs of changing marijuanas status
as a Schedule I illicit drug, a classification that strongly inhibits its clinical
study.
See
Drug Czars Office Endorses Arresting,
Jailing Medical Marijuana Smokers;
Canadas Parliament Resumes Historic Medical Marijuana Debate -- NORML Press Release
"He makes it sound as if the governments willing to fund research, when
its quite the opposite," says Tom Clark. "He makes it sound as if
theres no interest. Theres plenty of interest. But the government has been
reluctant [to fund it] because of its long-standing bias against marijuana."
Indeed, instead of advancing the medical-marijuana debate, McCaffrey is busily boxing
himself in. On one hand, he cannot promote marijuanas medical utility; doing so
would contradict his previous statements to the contrary and alienate his boss, Bill
Clinton, who is paralytically afraid of appearing soft on drugs. On the other hand,
denying marijuanas potential makes McCaffrey appear out of touch with a population
that sees little wrong with supplying it to the sick.
Make no mistake: medical marijuana is not a fringe countercultural issue. "I think
were starting to see a major change in the old Zeitgeist on the issue of
drugs," columnist Molly Ivins wrote late last year. "This is one of those
seismic shifts when the unsayable suddenly becomes sayable, when we notice that the
emperor is wearing no clothes."
Nowhere is the emperor more naked than on the issue of medical marijuana. But to borrow
a bit of military lingo, Barry McCaffrey still has the ability to change the rules of
engagement and permit legal medical use. He neednt view such a move as a surrender.
He would merely be a conscientious objector in a battle that he cannot possibly win.
See
Washington Post and
New York Times on IOM Medical Marijuana
Compare and Contrast A Split In The Establishment?
The Drug Czars Quote In The Post Wins The Prize.
|