Showing posts with label cannabis legalization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cannabis legalization. Show all posts

Saturday, October 8, 2022

Minnesota Medical Cannabis Program Petitions

 



I have written about this program in the past.  In Minnesota, we have a medical cannabis program that allows for the prescription of specific forms of cannabis for a list of what are seen as indications.  To get on that list is basically a review of opinions and the Commissioner. Even though this program runs like a mini-FDA, it does not have a standard for approving conditions for medical cannabis use.  And let’s face it - that is because the supporting evidence for using medical cannabis is very weak and in many if not most instances – non-existent. And as I have pointed out in the past – the evidence collected by the program is also weak.  As far as I know the program does not produce any detailed adverse drug effect information and a lot of that advice depends on the pharmacists dispensing the medical cannabis.

This year the conditions up for placement on the list of indications include opioid use disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, and irritable bowel syndrome. I restricted my comments to the first two conditions and the rationale is very clear. In the case of opioid use disorder (OUD), it is a widespread drug epidemic at this point fueled by widespread availability of opioids and synthetic opioids. Even though physician prescriptions have decreased overdose deaths continue to increase on a year-to-year basis. The pattern of overdoses has also changed substantially since OUD has spread from metropolitan to rural areas. Thirty years ago, OUD and overdose deaths were practically unheard of in rural areas and now they are commonplace. There are effective treatment for OUD as listed in the letter that follows.  There is a problem with access to substance use disorder treatment.  Most states have practically no detoxification facilities.  Access to physicians who are prescribing medication assisted treatment (MAT) for OUD (MOUD) is also very limited.

Like most political movements in the country – there is no critical analysis of the various cannabis initiatives.  To me – it was obvious from the start that medical cannabis was a way to start building political consensus for legalization of cannabis. Adding more intoxicants to the environment is never a good idea – but the practical issue is that the lesson of alcohol prohibition was that it could not be done without increasing crime, corruption, and the health dangers of unregulated alcohol. So a medical cannabis initiative is really not a genuine attempt to treat medical conditions with cannabis.

On that basis – it is not surprising that there is significant overreach in finding conditions where medical cannabis can be used. OUD and OCD are just two more diagnoses on that list. I was informed that my comments will be added but the vast majority of comments are not by physicians and are basically testimonials to cannabis. The FDA receives a lot of criticism and they also elicit public commentary but there is a core body of scientific decision makers.

With the writing of this post President Biden just came out with a statement that he is going to pardon people who are incarcerated for simple possession of marijuana and encourage governors to do the same (1).  That may be easier said than done since there was also a news report that the majority of these people have additional complicating charges.  He also initiated a review process by Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Attorney General on the way marijuana is listed in the Control Substance Act schedule.  It is currently a Schedule I drug making it the most dangerous and without medical applications according to this ranking. That results in a large grey zone when it is legally prescribed in some states and approved for recreation use in others.  There are associated problems with banking due to the federal scheduling but in an election year when any number of people from both parties are tripping over each other to legalize it – it seems like a foregone conclusion that it will be rescheduled at the minimum.

The Minnesota legislature approved low dose cannabis edibles earlier this year. There is a question about whether that was done by mistake. This is another step toward the eventual legalization of cannabis in Minnesota and will probably lead to the extinction of the Medical Cannabis program.  This story also illustrates the confusion among legislators about the basic differences between raw materials and cannabinoid derivatives. My viewpoint is legalization of cannabis was the goal all along and the users of medical cannabis have objected to higher fees for the medical product and many prefer smoking cannabis rather than using other forms.

 

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

 

1:  Statement from President Biden on Marijuana Reform October 7, 2022 Link.

2:  Miranda S.  Minnesota lawmakers voted to legalize THC edibles. Some did it accidentally.  July 2, 2022 Link.


The letter not in support of indications for opioid use disorder or obsessive compulsive disorder:

October 3, 2022

Office of Medical Cannabis
PO Box 64882
St. Paul, MN 55164-0882

To Whom It May Concern:

I am a Minnesota psychiatrist who recently retired from clinical practice. I continue to research and write about psychiatry.  I worked at one of the largest substance use disorder treatment facilities in the United States. Every person I saw had a substance use disorder (SUD) that was significant enough to need residential treatment. Alcohol use disorder was the most common followed by opioid use disorder (OUD).  I was also an adjunct professor and lectured on the epidemiology, assessment, and treatment of substance use disorders. Areas of focus included the neurobiology of SUD, opioid use disorders, chronic pain, and Attention Deficit~Hyperactivity Disorder. I did research on medication assisted treatment of alcohol use disorder and depression. 

As an SUD develops, there are several associated biases that lead to chronicity. The first is the euphorigenic effect or “high” that occurs with all substances. That becomes a permanent memory that all subsequent episodes of use are compared against. Tolerance to drug effects limits the ability to experience that same degree of euphoria.  That leads to attempts to use more or more powerful versions of the same drug. In the case of OUD, that has led to the use of more powerful opioids like fentanyl. A second bias is the idea that all emotions and reactions to stress can be controlled by external substances.  Cannabis, alcohol, and benzodiazepines are used for that purpose. In that situation, withdrawal symptoms are misinterpreted as anxiety or depression.   That leads to an additional substance being taken. Detoxification is required to determine a person’s baseline state and whether there is a treatable anxiety or depressive disorder. A third bias is that “I have a lot of time to quit.” Young people with severe SUD will often tell themselves: “I am only in my 20s, I can quit later and at that time go to work or school.” That prolongs their risk exposure and the associated morbidity and mortality. A fourth bias is people with SUD are not risk averse. In other words, if they knew a substance contained fentanyl and were risk averse, they would avoid it. This is not true. Many will seek out fentanyl products or products they know contain fentanyl in pursuit of getting high. That pursuit can get to the point that greater amounts of substances or more novel substances are used and they do not care what the outcome is. They are willing to risk a fatal outcome in pursuit of getting high.  Finally, withdrawal symptoms from substances create a negative reinforcement bias – substances need to be taken to avoid withdrawal symptoms.

Easy access to opioids is a major factor in the continuing opioid crisis and the “three waves” of this epidemic that are described by the CDC (1). There were several papers (3) published that suggested that medical cannabis use was associated with less opioid use. Those findings have not been validated over time.   There has been a study done showing that opioid use was more likely to increase rather than decrease (4) with cannabis use. That study is consistent with what I have seen in the clinic.  

To summarize:

1.  We are still in the midst of a 2 decades long opioid use epidemic that has produced significant overdose mortality and morbidity. 

2.  There are current FDA approved treatments (10 drugs in 3 categories) that have demonstrated ability to prevent opioid overdoses and treat opioid use disorder (2). 

3.  Suggesting that Minnesota residents with an opioid use disorder use cannabis with no proven treatment efficacy over the FDA approved medications that have efficacy presents a clear ethical problem considering the level of mortality associated with this disorder.

For these reasons medical cannabis should not be approved for opioid use disorder.

I am also recommending that medical cannabis not be approved for the treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder. The bulk of my argument rests on the information that I submitted last year recommending no medical cannabis approval for generalized anxiety disorder. In that submission, I pointed out that for many people cannabis use leads to anxiety and panic attacks rather than alleviating them. Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has effective psychotherapies and medical therapies. In fact, psychotherapy is the primary treatment modality. We currently have a healthcare system that rations access to both psychotherapy and medical treatment. When the lack of clinical trials of cannabis in OCD is considered, the same ethical dilemma presents as in the case of opioid use disorder. Is cannabis approved for OCD because health care systems and government regulators refuse to provide access to proven methods of treatment?

In both the case of opioid use disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder, neither should be an indication for medical cannabis for the above stated reasons.

Sincerely,

George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

Lino Lakes, MN

 

 

References:

1:  CDC.  Understanding the Epidemic:

https://www.cdc.gov/opioids/basics/epidemic.html

 

2:  FDA Information about Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT):  https://www.fda.gov/drugs/information-drug-class/information-about-medication-assisted-treatment-mat

3. Bachhuber MA, Saloner B, Cunningham CO, et al. Medical cannabis laws and opioid analgesic overdose mortality in the United States, 1999–2010. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174:1668–1673.

4:  Olfson M, Wall MM, Liu SM, Blanco C. Cannabis Use and Risk of Prescription Opioid Use Disorder in the United States. Am J Psychiatry. 2018 Jan 1;175(1):47-53. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.17040413. Epub 2017 Sep 26.

 


Friday, April 27, 2018

A Second Look At Recreational Cannabis - Already?





I don't know how many other people are weary of the onslaught of pro-cannabis propaganda over the past two decades.  The goal was clear to me at the outset - legalize marijuana.  I have previously posted that I think there will be legalized marijuana in every state in the United States.  I have also posted that "medical" marijuana or cannabis is basically a front for the legalize recreational marijuana movement.  I am very weary of all of the arguments about how cannabis is a miracle drug, how it will lead to stunning new discoveries, how it will lead to less opioid use and misuse, and all of the permutations of these pseudoscientific arguments.  Many of the legal arguments are just straight off-the-wall.  Those include put all the cannabis dealing cartels out of business, create jobs, and tax it as a great source of tax revenue.  The considerable downsides of adding another intoxicant to the culture seems to be mentioned only by a few psychiatrists who are familiar with a great many of the downsides from treating patients who have been using it for a lot longer than the legalization arguments have been in vogue.

A few of those problems became more evident last week. Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper came on CNN and discussed several correlates of cannabis legalization in Colorado.  Property crimes and violent crimes are up.  The number of homeless in Denver is up and some believe this is a correlate of increased crime.  The number of lethal motor vehicle accidents involving cannabis are up.  He did not mention health care related phenomena including a doubling of cannabis related hospital billing codes, a five-fold increase in cannabis related mental health codes, and an 80% increase in cannabis related calls to poison control centers (3).  Unintentional pediatric exposure to cannabis was also observed (4) to increase.  None of the costs of this medical care has been calculated as an offset of the tax revenue from the cannabis.  Gov. Hickenlooper made the point that recent tax revenues were about $200 million relative to a state budget of $30 billion and about 1/3 of that revenue goes for associated law enforcement and educational activities.  He advised against any state making the decision to legalize cannabis based on a tax revenue argument (5).  The articles in the popular press seem to emphasize the need for flexibility with the great social experiment of recreational cannabis and the Governor seems all for that up to a point.  That point is if it is apparent that the social costs in terms of crime and motor vehicle accidents is really up. At that point he suggests that the current cannabis laws can be reversed

Rather than get caught up the old causation versus correlation argument, I can say unequivocally that it is naive to assume that the legalization of another intoxicant would not lead to more problems.  The suggestion that problems would be less and that society will be improved overall by the use of more intoxicants can only be seen as a blatant political ploy.  There will be more accidents, more acute toxicity, and more psychiatric morbidity due to cannabis.  I don't know if Colorado is adding up those costs and trying to compare them to any advantages of legalized cannabis, but I would not be surprised at all if Colorado taxpayers don't incur more liability from cannabis than revenue.

Before any cannabis promoters attempt to teach me about the costs of alcohol - read this blog.  There is more posted here on the costs of alcohol than you will find in most places.  My point is not that alcohol doesn't cost more.  My point is fairly obvious and that is every time you add an intoxicant to society it costs you something.  It is not free or a net benefit.   Once cannabis is legal in all 50 states it will be easier to estimate the total damage.

The other article that came out last week had to do with the 420 holiday and a very interesting plot by Staples and Redelmeirer (see Figure 1).  In this essay the authors look at the 420 holiday which is a celebration of cannabis.  The celebrants gather for mass consumption of cannabis. They studied 25 years of fatal crash data between the hours of 4:20PM and 11:59PM on April 20 and compared the crashes at that time to crashed on control days (April 13 and April 27 during the same time interval).  The Forest Plot below shows the findings across a number of comparisons.




The risk of fatal crashes was higher on 420 and significantly higher for younger drivers. On geographic analysis absolute risk of a fatal crash was highest in New York, Texas, and Georgia.  Relative risk (see original article) was decreased only in Minnesota.  The authors comment that even though the majority of the population does not celebrate 420 (or even know that it exists) the traffic accident risk is similar to what is seen on Super Bowl Sunday and policy makers might want to take this into consideration.  So might anyone interested in the drunken driving issue.  Is it possible that cannabis intoxicated drivers as a population are more impaired than alcohol intoxicated drivers?

Those are the considerations from last week.  I am sure that more will occur as the United States legalizes cannabis in very state and as it becomes a legitimate industry.  An issue flagged by the CDC several years ago was the use of synthetic cannabinoids in order to avoid occupation related drug screens, but their initial data was from a time before cannabis was legalized in Colorado.  And once again this post is not an argument for or against legalization.  I hope that I have been quite explicit in saying that I anticipate widespread legalization of cannabis.

This post and most of the posts on this blog are to document the expected fall out from increasing the amount of intoxicants consumed by the population. It is neither benign or beneficial as suggested by the advocates.   


George Dawson, MD, DFAPA



References:

1: Staples JA, Redelmeier DA. The April 20 Cannabis Celebration and Fatal Traffic Crashes in the United States. JAMA Intern Med. 2018 Apr 1;178(4):569-572. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.8298. PubMed PMID: 29435568; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC5876802.

2: Colorado Attorney General Announces Indictment of Massive Illegal Marijuana Trafficking Conspiracy. June 28, 2017.

3: Wang GS, Hall K, Vigil D, Banerji S, Monte A, VanDyke M. Marijuana and acutehealth care contacts in Colorado. Prev Med. 2017 Nov;104:24-30. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.03.022. Epub 2017 Mar 30. PubMed PMID: 28365373; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC5623152.

4: Wang GS, Le Lait MC, Deakyne SJ, Bronstein AC, Bajaj L, Roosevelt G.Unintentional Pediatric Exposures to Marijuana in Colorado, 2009-2015. JAMA Pediatr. 2016 Sep 6;170(9):e160971. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.0971. Epub 2016 Sep 6. PubMed PMID: 27454910.

5: All Things Considered.  Colorado Gov. On How Federal Marijuana Decision Could Affect State.  January 4, 2018.



Graphics Credit:

1.  Photo at the top is a commercial cannabis grower from Shutterstock per their standard licensing agreement.

2.  Figure 1 above is reproduced with permission from [JAMA Intern Med. 2017. 178(4):569-572. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.8298. Copyright©(2017) American Medical Association. All rights reserved." from reference number 1. License number 4335700705440.



Saturday, December 12, 2015

Medical Marijuana For Intractable Pain - The Minnesota Update


Minnesota made headlines at least within the state lately by qualifying intractable pain (typically known as chronic noncancer pain) as a condition for Minnesota's Medical Cannabis program.  I find it politically interesting that when you want to take over medical systems of care the strategy is to eliminate the word medical wherever that is possible.  But in this case when there is limited if any medical evidence for a treatment that carries significant risks and the initiative seems like part of a political movement toward the general legalization of marijuana that the word medical is added to seemingly legitimize the entire process.  I don't think that there is anything medical about marijuana or cannabis.  If you want it legalized, make that argument and don't pretend that a compound (or more appropriately compounds)  that has been around for 5,000 years has suddenly become a miracle drug.  

I previously posted about the original statute and will not repeat any of that in this post.  The full details of the intractable pain indication are listed on a separate DHS web site including the definition of intractable pain.  The statutory definition of intractable pain is quite complicated and seems to misunderstand the nature of chronic pain, ignore the addiction cofounder, and address the non-cannabis treatment of chronic pain with Schedule II to V drugs and issue that seems totally unrelated to cannabis use.  To cite a couple of examples:

"§ Subdivision 1.Definition. For purposes of this section, "intractable pain"means a pain state in which the cause of the pain cannot be removed or otherwise treated with the consent of the patient and in which, in the generally accepted course of medical practice, no relief or cure of the cause of the pain is possible, or none has been found after reasonable efforts. Reasonable efforts for relieving or curing the cause of the pain may be determined on the basis of, but are not limited to, the following:
(1) when treating a nonterminally ill patient for intractable pain, evaluation by the attending physician and one or more physicians specializing in pain medicine or the treatment of the area, system, or organ of the body perceived as the source of the pain; or...." 

With chronic noncancer pain is is generally accepted that there is no medical treatment that will eliminate the pain.  There is no medication that will totally alleviate the pain.  That includes high potency opiate medications.  Most of the literature suggests that whether high potency opiates, anticonvulsants, ar antidepressants are used the result is a moderate amount of pain relief at best and additional measures like physical therapy and psychotherapy are needed to produce optimal results.  There is really minimal to no evidence that the addition of cannabis to existing pain medications will add anything.  In this case, the statute also suggests that all of these pain patients will be referred to "one or more physicians specializing in pain medicine" or the part of the body that the pain is associated with.  This statute seems like it could easily set-up a physician or group of physicians who could add cannabis to the medications that they are already prescribing.  In other words the statute is providing a non-medical indication that can be used to alter medical practice on a large scale by the prescription of an addicting drug.  We have seen previous epidemics of use and overprescribing based on similar theories.

Subd 2. from the same statute gets in to existing medical practice for reasons that are not apparent to me.  It includes the following introductory paragraph and goes on to cite the non-applicability of the statute to the issue of treating substance use disorders, use for non-therapeutic purposes, providing a scheduled drug for the purpose of terminating life in a person with intractable pain, and using a non-approved drug.  Based on my experience Schedule II-V drugs are widely used for non-therapeutic purposes if use for any indication outside of analgesia is considered a non-therapeutic purpose.  A few examples include taking extra medication for insomnia, anxiety, depression as well as mixing the medication with alcohol for an added effect.  It seems more than a little naive to me to think that a controlled substance with broad effects on the conscious state that potentially reinforces its own use will be not be used for other purposes.  That includes the use of cannabis and marijuana.        

"§ Subd. 2.Prescription and administration of controlled substances for intractable pain. Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, a physician may prescribe or administer a controlled substance in Schedules II to V of section 152.02 to an individual in the course of the physician's treatment of the individual for a diagnosed condition causing intractable pain. No physician shall be subject to disciplinary action by the Board of Medical Practice for appropriately prescribing or administering a controlled substance in Schedules II to V of section 152.02 in the course of treatment of an individual for intractable pain, provided the physician keeps accurate records of the purpose, use, prescription, and disposal of controlled substances, writes accurate prescriptions, and prescribes medications in conformance with chapter 147."

There is some science added to the Intractable Pain page in the form of a review entitled: Medical Cannabis For Non-Cancer Pain-A Systematic Review.  It was prepared in the standard manner of most current literature reviews critiquing the quality of the studies and looking at what the evidence shows.  Most people who are uninterested in the details of these reviews could benefit from reading the executive summary.  Like most of these systematic reviews the authors conclude that the overall evidence is sketchy, that a few studies established a response better than placebo, that the clinical trials are of short duration and patient selection is not likely to reflect who might use the drug in Minnesota, and that most of the trials looked at adjunctive treatment of cannabis and limited forms rather than cannabis monotherapy.  They also conclude that cannabinoids were associated greater risk of any adverse events, serious adverse events, and events associated with withdrawal from the study than placebo.  The authors were aware of a recent review in JAMA provided an interesting analysis of that data in the context of their review on pages 22 and 23.  The authors point out that their review (unlike the JAMA review) did not use data from unpublished studies in the meta-analysis of treatment effects.  Their re-analysis of the JAMA review data generally shows either evidence that does not show superiority over placebo or in the case where it does - the evidence is of low or insufficient strength.

I am not going to include an exhaustive review of the toxicity of cannabis or the developmental concerns of cannabis exposure in utero or in the developing adolescent brain.  I am considering a separate post on that topic.  For the purposes of an intractable pain post,  I will add a couple points about politics and regulation.  The first point is that chronic pain is a complex disorder.  It resembles what is commonly conceptualized as a psychiatric disorder much closer than what is considered a standard medical or surgical disorder.  Chronic pain is multidimensional and is frequently associated with depression, anxiety, and insomnia.  Pain ratings on any given day can reflect the state of those other conditions.  Cannabis can affect all of those other conditions in unpredictable ways.  The best example I can think of is the chronic marijuana smoker who starts in order to treat anxiety and stops years later because the anxiety is worse and he is now experiencing panic attacks or paranoia.  Anything that complicates the other dimensions of chronic pain will not be an acceptable overall treatment.  The second point is that some chronic pain patients end up taking a drug in an addictive manner independent of pain relief.  That is true for marijuana, opioids, and benzodiazepines.  Many patients will openly admit that they are using the drug because they like the effects, but it is not doing a thing for their pain.  The final point is that some people do not discriminate between numbness and analgesia.  The drug they take for pain has to induce a numb state - one where they generally have a difficult time functioning.  I include these points about chronic pain trials because these additional phenomena are usually not examined in the clinical trials.  The trial occurs as if every subject can rate their pain like they can take a blood pressure reading and that loses a lot of important information in the process.  The studies in the reviews listed here for cannabis in non-cancer pain can show weak positive effects and those kinds of studies will eventually be approved by the FDA as evidenced by some FDA actions where the regulatory considerations trump the scientific ones.  With marijuana being described as a fast growing $3 billion dollar a year business with a projected maximum market of $36.8 billion annually, you can bet there will be a large commercial lobby pushing for approval of whatever products they want to bring to market.  

I don't plan on getting too riled up about the Minnesota experiment and the political indications for "medical" marijuana.  It is clearly a response to the current cultural swing to view cannabis as a benign product and use the medical avenue to get total legalization.  When marijuana use gets as widespread as alcohol use, the population toxicity will be more evident.  In the meantime, I hope physicians don't get pulled into the politics - especially psychiatrists.

I don't plan on registering on the Medical Cannabis Registry and certifying patients for the political indications for its use.  I consider that to be a foolish endeavor.  It would be much easier to take physicians out of the loop instead of having them pretend to select patients for a drug with no medical indications.  If anything, the widespread use of marijuana or cannabis for whatever the reason will complicate psychiatric practice and increase the costs of treatment that is already rationed by healthcare businesses and the government.  


George Dawson, MD, DFAPA

Refs:

1:  Butler M, Krebs E, Sunderlin B, Kane RL.  Medical Cannabis for Non-Cancer Pain: A Systematic Review.  Prepared for: Office of Medical Cannabis Minnesota Department of Health, October 2015.

2:  Whiting PF, Wolff RF, Deshpande S, et al. Cannabinoids for Medical Use: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA.2015;313(24):2456-2473. doi:10.1001/jama.2015.6358.


Attribution:

Jennifer Martin (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons at: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AMarijuana_Plant_01.JPG

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Snorting Smarties

"Throughout the history of the United States, popular attitudes and legal responses regarding the consumption of mood-altering substances have oscillated from tolerance to disapproval and back again in cycles roughly the length of a lifetime."   David F. Musto, MD; Drugs in America, 2002 (p 3)


I heard about this story on my way in to work this morning.  Middle school kids crushing a particular brand of candy and snorting it.  I prefer the term insufflation but that is probably a bit too stodgy for a talk radio venue. I will let any readers who are interested in it Google it and look for relevant links and significant complications.  Before we go any farther I will say that I am unequivocally against snorting anything.   I am commenting on it here as an observation of two cultural phenomena - children's behavior mimicking adults and possibly predisposing them to the adult behavior and the cultural phenomenon of permissive versus prohibitive use of intoxicants.

I had an immediate association to a Psycritic blogpost that I responded to last night on whether marijuana legalization puts children and adolescents at risk.  Having lived through the era of an 18 year old drinking age, I would say that it definitely does.  The idea that you will now "tax and control" a newly legal intoxicant is a myth that only a politician or marijuana advocate would believe.  My high school class of predominantly 17 year olds was one of the first locked up in an all night graduation party in order to prevent drinking and driving deaths.  I don't imagine that anyone will be any more successful in keeping marijuana out of the hands of underage marijuana smokers than they were in keeping alcohol out of the hands of underage drinkers.

I found this behavior interesting because I observed a similar pattern of behavior among some of my classmates as early as the sixth grade.  People were smoking various materials that were not meant to be smoked.  They were ingesting materials that they believed would make them high, even when it was pharmacologically impossible.  Even before that I remember candy cigarettes.  They were in packs that resembled the real thing.  My father was a two pack a day smoker of high tar and high nicotine cigarettes and I had asthma so smoking even at a dress rehearsal level never interested me.  Candy cigarettes were frequently bought for children when I was growing up and everyone seemed to enjoy watching kids pretend to smoke.

It raises a larger question about addictive behaviors and whether modelling and rehearsing them can lead to practicing with the real thing.  A related question would be whether a society that is permissive about a particular drug would be more likely to support behaviors that mimic using the actual drug.  In the addiction field it is common to encounter these behaviors using both addictive and non-addictive compounds.  For example, many people in the first stages of stimulant, sedative,  or opioid addiction will start by crushing prescription tablets and smoking, snorting, or injecting them.  Using a prescription in this manner is typically not a good sign in terms of controlled use of a potentially addictive medication because all of these methods of use are designed to deliver high levels of drug to the brain in a shorter period of time.  That will often produce a temporary high after tolerance occurs to the oral form of the medication.  In some settings, non-addicting medications like antihistamines, antidepressants, and others will be smoked, injected, or snorted.  This can occur in correctional settings or situations where people may be trying to block out their conscious state and choose to produce a delirium consistent with that goal.  It can get to the point where medications in general are banned from a certain setting because there is a black market for them right in the prison even though they have no value out side of the prison setting.

Getting back to the mimicking of addictive behavior and whether it may predispose you to using the compound at risk it was investigated for smoking.  The authors of the study take a look at incomplete and indirect evidence and conclude that there is some evidence that candy cigarettes were possibly used as a marketing device by cigarette manufacturers.  In one survey 5.3% of adult smokers attributed their smoking to a past use of candy cigarettes.  I want to be clear that I am using the current trend of snorting candy as an example of mimicking addictive behavior with a substance that is meant to be eaten as candy.

I don't consider myself a crusader for one law versus another.  I have beaten my head against the wall on numerous political issues in the past and know that there are many hidden forces in this country that you can bet have much more leverage than I do either as a private citizen or a member of a medical professional organization.  There is one thing that you can count on in America and that is money will carry the day.  Politicians believing that there will be new tax revenue from the sales of an intoxicant is very reinforcing for them.  Their friends in the business world creating a monopoly product that people will line up to buy is another.  Don't forget that in 1884 Heroin was the brand name of an over-the-counter patent medication that was originally marketed by a pharmaceutical company.  At about the same time a competitor was selling 15 different brands of cocaine for smoking, injecting, and sniffing.  All of them were available over the counter without a prescription.  The restriction on that practice did not occur until the Harrison Act in 1914.

The coming rush to see who sells marijuana in this country will be an interesting one.  The outcome should be as predictable as the previous oscillations toward tolerance in this country.


George Dawson, MD, DFAPA


Klein JD, Forehand B, Oliveri J, Patterson CJ, Kupersmidt JB, Strecher V.  Candy cigarettes: do they encourage children's smoking? Pediatrics. 1992 Jan;89(1):27-31. PubMed PMID: 1728016.

Klein JD, Clair SS.  Do candy cigarettes encourage young people to smoke?  BMJ.2000 Aug 5;321(7257):362-5. Review. PubMed PMID: 10926600; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1118335.