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Marijuana Legalization:
The Impact and the Facts
Town Hall Meeting
Wednesday October 14, 2015
Independence Middle School
Scott Osiecki
Director of External Affairs
osiecki@adamhscc.org
216-241-3400
www.adamhscc.org
The ADAMHS Board of Cuyahoga County:
• Established on July 1, 2009:
• Consolidation of the Cuyahoga County Community Mental
Health Board and the Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services
Board of Cuyahoga County.
• Nearly 50 years of history.
• 18 Volunteer Members of the ADAMHS Board are
appointed:
• 8 by the Ohio Department of Mental Health
and Addiction Services.
• 10 by the County Executive/County Council.
2
The ADAMHS Board:
• Government agency:
• 1 of 50 in the State
• Plan
• Develop
• Fund
• Manage
• Evaluate community-based mental health & substance abuse
treatment and recovery services
ADAMHS Board Focus:
• Primary focus is to lead the Recovery Oriented System
of Care:
• Service delivery for individuals living with mental illness
and/or addictions that focuses first and foremost on
clients and family members.
• Culturally appropriate.
• Delivered in an accountable, effective and efficient
manner.
• Treatment for crisis situations and acute symptoms.
• Provide supports to truly help individuals recover.
Services:
• ADAMHS Board funds services to over 14,000 adults and children.
• ADAMHS Board does not provide direct services.
• Contract with over 50 provider agencies to deliver mental health
and addiction treatment and recovery support services:
• People not covered by Insurance/Medicaid.
• Recovery Support Services not covered by Insurance/Medicaid to
people covered or not covered by Medicaid:
• Crisis Stabilization
• Housing
• Vocational/Employment
• Peer Support
• Prevention
• Education
• Information and Referral
• Detoxification
• Clients Rights
Services:
24-Hour Suicide Prevention, Mental Health & Addiction
Crisis & Information & Referral Line
Available to Every County Resident at No Charge.
216-623-6888:
Operated by FrontLine Service Inc.
Mobile Crisis Team
Addiction Facts:
• Addiction to marijuana, heroin, cocaine, alcohol and
other drugs, and even gambling, is a diagnosable brain
disease.
• Addiction is just like any other chronic physical
disease. It can be treated.
• Approximately 10% of all Ohioans will have a substance
abuse problem or addiction sometime during their
lifetime.
• Addiction can affect all people, regardless of race,
religion or social economic background.
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Official Position on
Legalization of Marijuana
The ADAMHS Board of Cuyahoga County opposes any attempts to
legalize, promote, grow and sell marijuana for recreational purposes
in the State of Ohio, and will lead and assist in efforts to defeat any
actions to legalize marijuana including an Ohio Constitutional
Amendment.
This decision is congruent with the Board’s efforts to prevent mental
illness and addictions and ensure that recovery services are
available. The Board believes that the use of marijuana is not benign
-- which is consistent with major medical organizations -- as studies
clearly outline the physical harm of marijuana including increasing
the risk of psychotic disease by five times, and that adolescents are
especially vulnerable to its many known adverse effects.
May 27, 2015
Official Position on
Legalization of Marijuana
In addition to the physical effects, the Board also believes that there
would be ramifications on society, including exacerbating a current
problem of employers not being able to hire candidates or retain
employees because of failed drug tests, decreased adolescent
perceptions of marijuana’s harmful effects, and a potential increase
of individuals developing addictions to marijuana and other drugs.
The Board also believes that marijuana for medical purposes should
be subject to the same research, consideration, and study as any
other potential medicine, under the standards of the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration (FDA).
How did Board Develop this Position?
• Cross-section of Board staff met internally to develop recommendation to the Board:
• Proposed Ohio Constitutional Amendment.
• Pros and cons of the legalization of marijuana:
• Merits of medical marijuana based on research that has proven the benefits of smoked and/or ingested uses for some illnesses.
• Consensus was reached that the ADAMHS Board should oppose the amendment.
• Farid Sabet, MD, Chief Clinical Officer Consultant for the Board:
• Maintains his position against legalization of marijuana and endangering lives -- which is the same as all the major medical organizations -- as studies clearly point to the harm including increasing the risk of psychotic disease by five times.
• Recommendation presented to Board through Committee Process.
What the Board Considered:
Reasons to Support the Marijuana Amendment:
Prohibition and arrests have failed to control the use and domestic
production of marijuana. Government has tried to use criminal penalties
to prevent marijuana use for over 75 years and yet:
Marijuana is now used by over 25 million people annually.
Cannabis is currently the largest cash crop in the United States.
Marijuana is grown all over the planet.
Issue 3 Proposes:
Regulated, legal market in marijuana would reduce marijuana sales and use
among teenagers, as well as reduce their exposure to other drugs in the illegal
market.
Legalized marijuana would reduce the flow of money from the American
economy to international criminal gangs.
Marijuana is not considered a lethal drug and is considered safer than alcohol.
What the Board Considered:
Marijuana is not toxic to humans:
Overdoses are uncommon.
Not nearly as addictive as alcohol or tobacco.
Unfair and unjust to treat marijuana users more harshly under the
law than the users of alcohol or tobacco.
Marijuana should be taxed to support beneficial government
programs.
Marijuana may have positive attributes:
Medical value.
Recreational use with relatively mild side effects.
Out of 60 Peer-Reviewed Studies on Medical Marijuana Involving
Cannabis and Cannabis Extracts from 1990 – 2014, 41 (68%) of the
studies were “pro” medical marijuana use.
What the Board Considered:
Reasons to Oppose the Marijuana Amendment:
Potency of THC – chemical responsible for most of marijuana's psychological effects is
at least 3 times more toxic than it was in the 1970’s, due to improved growing
practices.
Extremely addictive for some people.
Crime increases around legal retail locations.
Northwestern University found:
Marijuana users have abnormal brain structure and poor memory.
Chronic marijuana abuse may lead to brain changes resembling schizophrenia.
Younger the person starts using marijuana, the worse the effects become.
What the Board Considered:
Reasons to Oppose the Marijuana Amendment:
American Medical Association:
Heavy cannabis use in adolescence causes persistent impairments in
neurocognitive performance and IQ.
Increased rates of anxiety, mood and psychotic thought disorders.
Marijuana smoke is even more toxic than cigarette smoke.
483 chemicals in marijuana and when smoked or ingested have 4 to 5 times more
tars and cancer causing agents than tobacco cigarettes.
Regular users are hit with devastating lung problems as much as 20 years earlier
than smokers.
Respiratory problems that tobacco smokers have (daily cough and phlegm,
symptoms of chronic bronchitis).
Tar inhaled and the level of carbon monoxide absorbed by marijuana smokers is
3 to 5 times greater than among tobacco smokers.
What the Board Considered:
Impaired health includes more than lung damage:
Fatigue, paranoia, possible psychosis, memory problems, depersonalization,
mood alterations, urinary retention, constipation, decreased motor
coordination, lethargy, slurred speech, and dizziness.
Even small amounts of marijuana can cause temporary sterility.
Impact on the babies of women who smoke include birth defects, mental
abnormalities and increased risk of leukemia in children.
Short term effects include problems with memory and learning, distorted
perception, difficulty in thinking and problem-solving, and loss of
coordination.
Heavy users may have increased difficulty sustaining attention, shifting
attention to meet the demands of changes in the environment, and in
registering, processing and using information.
How & Why this Position?
Decimates many people's lives:
Movies often portray marijuana users as harmless, fun-loving people who spend
their time laughing and eating, but the reality is people are flunking out of
school, losing their jobs, becoming frustrated because they can't concentrate
and/or losing the love of their lives.
Smoked marijuana as medicine is not promoted by major medical
organizations but rather marijuana law reform groups.
FDA concluded that no sound scientific studies have supported medical use
of smoked marijuana for treatment.
How & Why this Position?
Columbia University found:
Residents of states with medical marijuana had marijuana abuse/dependence
rates almost twice as high as states without such laws.
Since certain states began permitting the dispensing of medical and recreational
marijuana, adolescents’ perceptions of the harmful effects of marijuana have
decreased, and marijuana use has increased significantly.
An additional study in the Annals of Epidemiology found that, among youths
ages 12-17, marijuana use rates were higher in states with medical
marijuana.
Bottom-line. . .
It’s not good for your physical and mental health.
Effects are especially bad for youth.
Makes learning and work difficult.
Message that it is OK because it is legal is “harmful.”
Addictive for many.
There will be an increase of people seeking treatment
for addiction -- not only to marijuana but to other drugs –
as well as related mental health issues.
Smoking marijuana has not been proven to be effective
for medical issues.
1 in 4 People
Have a Mental Illness or an Addiction
to Alcohol or Other Drugs
3 in 4 People Know Someone
with Mental Illness or an Addiction
Treatment Works.
People Recover.
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