chugs
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2004
- Messages
- 2,025
because i'm lazy and have already said it on another forum (newscientist.com) this was my response to essentially the article and some denalist who was defending the statistical rigour of 31 subjects.....
By your logic large scale epidemiological are a waste of money and time, if 31 subjects is sufficient to prove that heavy cannabis use shrinks brains.
I won't belittle the readers of New Scientists but there are so many variables that I hardly believe the University of Melbourne were able to overcome. However it needs to be said a massive problem in long term drugs studies is that is almost impossible to find subjects that aren't poly drug users.
I find it impossible to believe that these 15 cannabis users did not use, on a regular basis, any other drug, illicit or legal.
The other problem is that no one has published the full paper that was peer reviewed (apparently) by Archives of General Psychiatry, who by the way require payment in order to see the paper.
What has been feed, in an alarmist way, is a shallow media release, regurgitated by lazy journlists, across the entire planet.
I won't deny that there negative outcomes with heavy cannabis. However most studies show (and I can attest to this from personal experience) that these negative outcomes are relatively temporary and cease once user reduces or stops their habit.
Thirdly if the brains of heavy cannabis users were shrinking we would have see millions of these walking wounded all around the world.
Clearly this is not the case.
I also have a massive problem with the use of the word "joint". Which should be banned. Was the joint 5 inches long and 2 inches wide? Did the user smoke high THC content cannabis, or just leaf?
Can the researchers even guarantee the drugs weren't cut with other agents (cannabis in Australia can be mixed with speed for example)?
Lastly I find it laughable that the Guardian did a far superior job of researching and reporting on this story. They even found a study that:
"A New York University scanned the brains of a group of 17- to 30-year-olds who had smoked cannabis two to three times a week for at least a year. In that study, the brains of drug users looked no different from those who had never taken cannabis.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/jun/03/drugs.drugsandalcohol
There are so many variables and its a shame New Scientist is not vigorously challenging this sort of research.
NB: I find it disgusting that many respectable publications have done nothing more then to paraphrase the media release.
And YES 31 subjects is plenty for a rigorous statistical analysis
By your logic large scale epidemiological are a waste of money and time, if 31 subjects is sufficient to prove that heavy cannabis use shrinks brains.
I won't belittle the readers of New Scientists but there are so many variables that I hardly believe the University of Melbourne were able to overcome. However it needs to be said a massive problem in long term drugs studies is that is almost impossible to find subjects that aren't poly drug users.
I find it impossible to believe that these 15 cannabis users did not use, on a regular basis, any other drug, illicit or legal.
The other problem is that no one has published the full paper that was peer reviewed (apparently) by Archives of General Psychiatry, who by the way require payment in order to see the paper.
What has been feed, in an alarmist way, is a shallow media release, regurgitated by lazy journlists, across the entire planet.
I won't deny that there negative outcomes with heavy cannabis. However most studies show (and I can attest to this from personal experience) that these negative outcomes are relatively temporary and cease once user reduces or stops their habit.
Thirdly if the brains of heavy cannabis users were shrinking we would have see millions of these walking wounded all around the world.
Clearly this is not the case.
I also have a massive problem with the use of the word "joint". Which should be banned. Was the joint 5 inches long and 2 inches wide? Did the user smoke high THC content cannabis, or just leaf?
Can the researchers even guarantee the drugs weren't cut with other agents (cannabis in Australia can be mixed with speed for example)?
Lastly I find it laughable that the Guardian did a far superior job of researching and reporting on this story. They even found a study that:
"A New York University scanned the brains of a group of 17- to 30-year-olds who had smoked cannabis two to three times a week for at least a year. In that study, the brains of drug users looked no different from those who had never taken cannabis.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2008/jun/03/drugs.drugsandalcohol
There are so many variables and its a shame New Scientist is not vigorously challenging this sort of research.
NB: I find it disgusting that many respectable publications have done nothing more then to paraphrase the media release.