Remembering
Judge Francis Young
Note : In Judge Young's report cannabis is referred
to as marijuana
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
_______________________________________
)
In The Matter Of
)
)
MARIJUANA RESCHEDULING PETITION )
_______________________________________)
OPINION AND RECOMMENDED RULING,FINDINGS
OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND DECISION OF Administrative LAW JUDGE.
FRANCIS L. YOUNG, Administrative Law Judge
DATED: SEP 6 1988
FRANCIS L. YOUNG, Administrative Law Judge
& & & & & & & &
Part VIII.
ACCEPTED SAFETY FOR USE UNDER MEDICAL SUPERVISION
With respect to whether or not there is "a lack of accepted
safety
for use of [marijuana] under medical supervision", the record shows the
following facts to be uncontroverted.
Findings of Fact
- Point 3. The most obvious concern when dealing with drug safety
is the possibility of lethal effects. Can the drug cause death?
- 4. Nearly all medicines have toxic, potentially lethal effects.
But marijuana is not such a substance. There is no record in the extensive
medical literature describing a proven, documented cannabis-induced fatality.
- 5. This is a remarkable statement. First, the record on
- marijuana encompasses 5,000 years of human experience. Second, marijuana
is now used daily by enormous numbers of people throughout the world.
Estimates suggest that from twenty million to fifty million Americans routinely,
albeit illegally, smoke marijuana without the benefit of direct medical supervision.
Yet, despite this long history of use and the extraordinarily high numbers of
social smokers, there are simply no credible medical reports to suggest that consuming
marijuana has caused a single death.
- 6. By contrast aspirin, a commonly used, over-the-counter
- medicine, causes hundreds of deaths each year.
- 7. Drugs used in medicine are routinely given what is called
- an LD-50. The LD-50 rating indicates at what dosage fifty percent of
test animals receiving a drug will die as a result of drug induced toxicity.
A number of researchers have attempted to determine marijuana's LD-50 rating in
test animals, without success. Simply stated, researchers have been unable
to give animals enough marijuana to induce death.
- 8. At present it is estimated that marijuana's LD-50 is around
- 1:20,000 or 1:40,000. In layman terms this means that in order to induce
death a marijuana smoker would have to consume 20,000 to 40,000 times as much
marijuana as is contained in one marijuana cigarette. NIDA-supplied marijuana
cigarettes weigh approximately .9 grams. A smoker would theoretically have
to consume nearly 1,500 pounds of marijuana within about fifteen minutes to induce
a lethal response.
- 9. In practical terms, marijuana cannot induce a lethal response
as a result of drug-related toxicity.
- 10. Another common medical way to determine drug safety is
- called the therapeutic ratio. This ratio defines the difference between
a therapeutically effective dose and a dose which is capable of inducing adverse
effects.
- 11. A commonly used over-the-counter product like aspirin has a
- therapeutic ratio of around 1:20. Two aspirins are the recommended dose
for adult patients. Twenty times this dose, forty aspirins, may cause a
lethal reaction in some patients, and will almost certainly cause gross injury
to the digestive system, including extensive internal bleeding.
- 12. The therapeutic ratio for prescribed drugs is commonly around
1:10 or lower. Valium, a commonly used prescriptive drug, may cause very
serious biological damage if patients use ten times the recommended (therapeutic)
dose.
- 13. There are, of course, prescriptive drugs which have much
lower therapeutic ratios. Many of the drugs used to treat patients with
cancer, glaucoma and multiple sclerosis are highly toxic. The therapeutic
ratio of some of the drugs used in antineoplastic therapies, for example, are
regarded as extremely toxic poisons with therapeutic ratios that may fall below
1:1.5. These drugs also have very low LD-50 ratios and can result in toxic,
even lethal reactions, while being properly employed.
- 14. By contrast, marijuana's therapeutic ratio, like its LD-50,
- is impossible to quantify because it is so high.
- 15. In strict medical terms marijuana is far safer than many
- foods we commonly consume. For example, eating ten raw potatoes can
result in a toxic response. By comparison, it is physically impossible to
eat enough marijuana to induce death.
- 16. Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest
- therapeutically active substances known to man. By any measure of rational
analysis marijuana can be safely used within a supervised routine of medical care."
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