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fact sheet 
marijuana position paper
Chautauqua Alcoholism & Substance Abuse Council (CASAC) is opposed to the use of marijuana as a recreational
drug.
Research on the health and safety effects of
marijuana strongly correlates with many
mental, emotional, psychological, physical
and spiritual problems. In addition, many
crimes, accidents,
job and school
performance
problems have been
associated with the
use of marijuana.
While not everyone
that uses marijuana
becomes drug
dependent, the
reality is that as
with alcohol and
other drugs,
marijuana use
certainly can lead
to profound,
chronic and
progressive
chemical
dependency.
Its use can be very serious, dangerous, and
have a profound impact upon the quality of
life for hundreds of thousands of Americans
and their families.
The consumption of marijuana is not recommended.
For many users it causes mild-to-severe distress
and it may have even more profound physical or
psychological effects especially for the following:
to individuals who are engaging in activities that
could potentially place themselves and others at
risk for personal
injury such as:
-
operating machinery
-
use of firearms
-
swimming, boating,
driving, etc.
-
women who are
pregnant or trying
to conceive
-
people who have a
family history of
chemical dependency
(especially children of
addicted parents)
-
individuals using
other drugs including
alcohol and/or
prescription
medications (even
over the counter brands)
-
to all individuals who are predisposed to
emotional issues and problems; to all children and
adolescents
-
individuals who demonstrate some degree of
chemical dependency on any substance.
psychopharmacological
properties
Marijuana is a powerful, mind and mood
altering drug. A very small amount of
cannabis, i.e., 2-3 mg of THC, can produce a
high for the occasional user. A single
marijuana cigarette may contain as much as
20-30 mg or even more. As an hallucinogen,
the effects of this drug are particularly
sensitive to individual differences in
personality and
environment settings,
and may vary widely.
At moderate to high
doses of THC, mood
varies considerably
while anxiety and panic
have also been
reported. Depression
may also be enhanced.
Impairment of short
term memory,
disturbances in thought
patterns, lapses in attention,
depersonalization, and sensory distraction
also occur. Larger doses can bring on
stronger distortions of time and space,
illusions, mental confusion and panic
reactions. Extremely large doses can cause
hallucinations (5), and marijuana flashbacks
have been reported by some users (6).
Depending on dose and type, hallucinogens
variously produce hypoactivity or
hyperactivity, aggression or docility, marked
autonomic stimulation, incoordination, and
hypersensitivity to sensory stimuli. These
compounds alter the electroencephalogram
tests in both animals and humans (7).
THC interferes with the normal functioning
of the cerebellum, the hippocampus and
portions of the cerebrum (8). Animal studies
have shown an accumulation of THC stored
in the synaptic vesicles of the brain cells. This
results in a thickening of the cell wall and
synaptic cleft (perhaps hundreds of times
thicker than normal). This profoundly slows
the transmission of neurotransmitters and causes
interference of the delivery at the receptor site
(9).
physical dangers of marijuana use
Research has consistently demonstrated that
there are potentially serious and damaging
physical effects from marijuana use and abuse.
There is documented evidence that marijuana
typically causes acute
changes in the heart and
circulation. It increases
the work of the heart,
usually by raising the
heart rate by as much as
50%, and in some people
by raising blood pressure.
While these effects may
only be temporary, it
increases the need for
oxygen to the body while
at the same time
decreasing the supply of oxygen.
This places a threat for persons with
hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, and
coronary atherosclerosis (10). Research indicates
that it may be especially dangerous for cardiac
patients to combine marijuana with alcohol (11).
In fact, the National Academy of Science Institute
of Medicine recommends that persons with
cardiovascular disease avoid the drug (12). Dr.
Ronald I Herning and Dr. Jean Lud Cadet, with
colleagues at NIDA's Intramural Research
Program in Baltimore, report preliminary
evidence suggesting that chronic abuse of
marijuana can restrict blood flow to the brain and
increase the risk of stroke 12 (a).
Smoking marijuana can lead to worse results
for the lungs than smoking tobacco (13). There
is nearly five times more carbon monoxide and
three times as much tar inhaled into the lungs
when one smokes a marijuana cigarette as
opposed to a tobacco cigarette (14). Marijuana
smokers may suffer bronchitis, emphysema,
and bronchial asthma (15). Marijuana users
are twice as likely to report symptoms of
chronic lung disease as non-users (16), and
one finding showed that men who smoked
only marijuana on a regular basis displayed
airway obstruction. Marijuana smoke
produces 50% more hydrocarbons than
tobacco smoke.
Hydrocarbons are the
chemicals associated
with lung cancer. In
fact, marijuana smoke
contains 50% more
cancer causing
materials than
tobacco smoke (17),
and has been linked to
both pre-cancerous
growths and to cancer
(18) (19).
Heavy use of
marijuana may affect
the endocrine or
hormonal systems of both men and women
causing reduced levels of testosterone,
lowered sperm count, impotence, and
gynecomastia (development of the mammary
glands) in men, and disrupted menstrual
cycles in women (20). Furthermore, high
doses over a period of time can lead to
depression of libido and impotence (21). In
both animal and human studies, heavy use of
marijuana was found to possibly interfere with
the T-lymphocyte part of the immune system,
reducing resistance to viral infection and
cancer (22). Cannabis can also inhibit the
intracellular synthesis of proteins DNA and
RNA, and inhibit cell division, similar to alcohol and the opioids (23).
amotiviational syndrome
Clinical evidence suggests a correlation between
chronic use of marijuana and the development of
a syndrome characterized by a marked decrease
in personal drive, motivation and ambition, with
apathy about the future, lethargy, shortened
attention span, high distractibility, decreased
concentration, and an overall impairment of
judgement and memory of the chronic user (24).
Very regular high doses of cannabis may be
associated with
significant
psychological
adjustment problems in
some users (25). It is
unclear whether the
development of an
amotivational syndrome
is a causative factor of
heavy use of marijuana
or an effect of chronic
use. Conservatively, it
has been suggested that
heavy use of marijuana
may increase the
likelihood of the
development of the
syndrome, and that the
syndrome does reinforce the chronic use of
marijuana (26).
mental illness and associated dangers of marijuana use
Research has long implicated cannabis as an
exacerbating factor in mental illness where mental
illness and/or personality problems are pre-existing or concurrent conditions. Recent
research has largely supported these earlier
findings.
One study found that the severity of depression
and anxiety symptoms increased progressively
with the degree of involvement with cannabis,
and chronic use of cannabis was associated with a
high prevalence of co-morbid psychiatric
disorders (27). Other studies demonstrated that
cannabis use predicted an increased risk of
developing
clinical psychosis, and cannabis
users showed higher scores on schizotypy,
borderline and psychoticism scales than
never-users (28); that the risk of developing
schizophrenia among heavy users was six
times greater than among non-users (29); that
for highly introspective individuals, marijuana
use was associated with self-reports of poorer
adult mental health (30); that greater
dependence on alcohol and marijuana was
found to be one
determining factor
predicting worse
outcomes for youth in
areas of criminality,
conduct disorder,
depression, and
attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (31); and that
substance dependence
(including cannabis)
related significantly to
suicide attempts and
self-injury histories of
youth (32). Other
studies have
implicated marijuana
use in depression
(33); panic reactions
and suicide (34) (35)
(36); and anti-social
personality
characteristics (37)
(38).
The American Psychiatric Association
demonstrates the seriousness and severity of
marijuana effects beyond simple cannabis
intoxication. They include Cannabis
Intoxication Delirium, Cannabis Induced
Psychotic Disorder with Delusions, Cannabis
Induced Psychotic Disorder with
Hallucinations, Cannabis Induced Anxiety
Disorder, and Cannabis Related Disorders not
Otherwise Specified (39). The Cannabis
related mental disorders are quite serious, and
many people find themselves as chronic clients in
mental health programs or as mentally ill chemical
abusers because of the effects of marijuana.
marijuana and job performance,
school performance, driving, and crime
Employees who are marijuana users were found
less likely to commit to their organizations, had
less faith in management, and experienced more
job dissatisfaction (40).
These workers reported
more absenteeism,
tardiness, accidents,
worker's compensation
claims, and job turnover
than workers who did not
use marijuana. They were
also more likely to report
to work with a hangover,
miss work because of a
hangover, and be drunk or
use other drugs at work
(41).
In terms of school,
studies have found that
college students who use
marijuana regularly had
impaired skills related to
attention, memory and
learning twenty-four hours
after they had last used the
drug, suggesting that
marijuana users may be
limiting their ability to learn. Evidence especially
shows that heavy marijuana smoking impairs the
cognitive processes (42). Heavy marijuana users,
when compared to non-users, show impaired
cognitive functioning across the board, and
significant impairment in mathematics (a measure
of the ability to do quantitative thinking), and in
verbal expression (a measure of correct and
appropriate word use).
Heavy users showed a trend toward impairment
in selecting synonyms, in literary comprehension,
or overall ability to learn (not just when "high",
but a lingering loss of cognitive skills after the
high is gone) (43). Animal studies show
structural damage to the hippocampus, a
structure critical in learning and memory,
from the principle ingredient in marijuana
(THC) (44). A major study in New York
demonstrated that 51 percent of marijuana
using college students engaged in some form
of "public misconduct" and 37 percent of
users reported "serious personal problems"
due to marijuana use (45).
In terms of driving, marijuana use impairs
driving-related
functions and there is
a definite increased
risk for auto accidents
with use of marijuana
(46). It impairs motor
coordination, alters
sense of time and
distance, and makes
one drowsy. One
study demonstrated
severe balance
impairment and 2.5 times more errors in
coordination tests in a dose-response fashion
(47). One study showed that from 4-to-12
percent of fatal and non-fatal accident victims
had marijuana in their bloodstream, and
another study showed that 32% of drivers in a
Baltimore Shock Trauma Unit had marijuana
in their bloodstream.
Marijuana use is definitely related to crime.
In Omaha, 42% of all males arrested in 1995
tested positive for marijuana; in San Diego
35% of males arrested tested positive; and in
Chicago 41% of arrestees tested positive for
marijuana in 1995 (48). In fact, the
percentage of male arrestees testing positive
for marijuana was equal to or greater than
that of cocaine in 13 of 23 Drug Use
Forecasting cities studied (49).
Additionally, a new study has found a
connection between marijuana use and crime
among 18-20 year olds, according to a
Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Weekly. The
study found that the marijuana-use rate among
young arrestees rose steadily from 25 % in 1991
to 57 % in 1996, and remained at 60% through
the rest of the 1990's (49a).
dangers of marijuana dependency
The classic definition of addiction includes:
tolerance, withdrawal, loss of control,
unsuccessful or failed attempts to abstain or
control use, craving, pre-occupation with use,
and use despite adverse consequences (use
despite psychological,
social, legal or personal
consequences.) From any
and/or all of these
perspectives, marijuana is a
drug of addiction.
Marijuana is significantly
more potent than it was in
the sixties, making the drug
even more addictive. In
1994, a U.S. Court of
Appeals ruled that marijuana
should remain a Schedule I drug as it is highly
addictive (50).
While tolerance to marijuana and psychological
dependency are commonly accepted as serious
syndromes of marijuana use, some heavy users of
marijuana show signs of withdrawal. In one
study marijuana withdrawal subjects
demonstrated restlessness, loss of appetite,
trouble sleeping, weight loss, and shaky hands
(51). Physical dependence on cannabis may
develop in those who use high doses daily, and
abrupt termination of use can produce a mild
withdrawal syndrome with symptoms including
sleep disturbance, irritability, loss of appetite and
consequent weight loss, nervousness, anxiety,
sweating, and upset stomach, chills, increased
body temperature and tremors can occur. The
withdrawal sickness usually lasts for less than a
week, although the sleep disturbances may persist
for a longer period (52).
One treatment program demonstrated that two-thirds of cannabis-dependent patients reported
withdrawal, and most claimed serious
problems from the cannabis (53). Progression
from first use to regular cannabis use was
found as rapid as tobacco progression, and
more rapid than that of alcohol, suggesting
that for this population - that the drug
potently reinforces cannabis-taking,
producing both dependence and withdrawal
(54). As for the potency of marijuana
dependence, many dependent users state that
it is "impossible" for them to quit. In a study
including people who use both cocaine and
marijuana, many stated that giving up the use
of marijuana was in some ways more difficult
than giving up the cocaine use (55). In all, it
is estimated that about 10% of marijuana
users become chemically dependent upon the
drug during their years of heaviest use (56).
While many researchers believe that marijuana
is a mildly physiological addictive substance
studies do indicate that marijuana is harder to
kick than many suspect (57), and is as
powerful as other drug addictions (58).
marijuana effects on maturation process
Adolescence is a time of life when mind and
body are maturing, and when social and
emotional mechanisms of adjustment are
being formed. As use of marijuana generally
begins during teen years, risk of impaired
emotional growth and development is of
crucial concern. Many psychiatrists have
expressed concern that regular marijuana use
by youth produces adverse effects on
psychological maturation (59). It has long
been said that emotional development ceases
at the time one begins marijuana use.
Although not definitive, studies have shown
that use may increase the risk of discontinuing
high school education and of increasing job
instability in young adulthood (60), and these
effects upon development may cascade
throughout young adult life and impact upon
the quality of life of the user (as an adult) and/or
their children (61).
marijuana related birth defects
Studies show that marijuana may seriously affect
fetal development. Lower birth weights, a
shorter gestation period, major malformations,
and the occurrence of miscarriages increases with
marijuana use (62). There is a risk of harm after
birth for breast-feeding infants if their mothers
use marijuana as it passes through breast milk in
almost pure form to the infant (63). Even prior
to conception, marijuana use causes changes in
both males and females. It causes a decrease in
testosterone, produces fewer sperm, and
produces sperm with more abnormal
chromosomes for the fathers-to-be. In addition
marijuana may produce more testosterone and
tended to produce less healthy eggs in females.
With poorer quality eggs and sperm with
abnormal defects there is an increased occurrence
of birth defects. Marijuana also interferes with
cell division, a process crucial for reproduction
for healthy fetal growth and development (64)
(65). One laboratory study of pregnant rats
exposed to cannabis produced less fertile
offspring with smaller reproductive organs (66),
and another study demonstrated that embryonic
development may be halted before the three-day
stage suggesting that embryos are prevented from
attaching to the uterine wall if exposed to
marijuana (67). While studies demonstrate mixed
findings, moderate marijuana use was found to be
related to increased risk of ocular hypertelorism
and epicanthus; and other studies have suggested
that there may be significant (although
temporary) differences in the behavior patterns
and nervous systems of infants whose mothers
frequently used marijuana during pregnancy (68).
Preliminary findings from a 15 year study
indicate that prenatal exposure to marijuana
impairs decision making, future planning,
cognition (reasoning and memory) and sustained
attention among children who were marijuana-exposed babies (69)
issues for further discussion
Medical marijuana
The
Council supports more medical research
regarding the clinical use of marijuana,
consistent with the recently published study
by the Institute of Medicine. It is important
to note that marijuana is not a cure for any
condition, but is for the management of
symptoms. Use should only be under the
auspice and regulations of the F.D.A. and
there may be other more appropriate
medicinal alternatives than the use of
marijuana.
Only a small percentage do smoke marijuana
According to the
1996 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse, only 8.6% of Americans smoked
marijuana in the past year... and of those who
have used it a significant percentage have quit
never to use marijuana again!
The "pro-marijuana" literature
Don't be mislead by all the pro-marijuana literature that's available. Our review of that literature suggests that much of it is written from a biased point of view and is suspect, misleading, or dismisses accurate findings by confusing or negating primary factors.
Marijuana use will definitely increase if it's legalized
Accessibility and availability
are prime determinants in the level of drug
use and as marijuana use increased with
decriminalization, experts acknowledge that it
will most certainly dramatically increase if
legalized.
Denial
Chemically dependent people protect their drug use, and denial is one of the preferred defense mechanisms in all chemical dependencies. We often hear, "I don't have a problem" or "People over-react to marijuana" or "I can control the use" or "It doesn't have any bad effects." Denial is often profound but frequently others can see what chemically dependent individuals fail to see or recognize themselves.
Synergism
Research suggests that marijuana "reacts" with other substances in a synergistic manner, thereby making "mixing drugs" even more dangerous to life, health and safety.
Chemical dependency and treatment
As with alcohol and all drugs,
marijuana can certainly lead to chronic and
progressive chemical dependency. With treatment
and a good 12-Step program people can and do
recover. We strongly encourage those who are
dependent and their families to access the
available programs in their region, and we
encourage government to make more prevention
and treatment programs available and affordable
- especially to those within the criminal justice
and human service delivery systems.
Prevention
The Council supports ongoing discussion around national, state and local policies pertaining to drug abuse (including insurance and health care issues, criminal justice, workplace, child welfare, etc.) and development of prevention education, intervention and treatment services.
Parental marijuana use increases risk of use by child
A new government study found that children
whose parents used marijuana are more likely to
use the drug as well. The study by the
Department of Health and Human Services was
conducted by federal researchers between 1979
and 1996 and included surveys of 9,463 parents
and children. The study found that parents who
used marijuana multiple times and don't view the
drug as risky were more likely to have children
who felt the same way. (61) A
research and fact sheet citations
(1) Year-End 2001Emergency Department Data from the Drug Abuse Warning Network; (2) Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, DHHS Publication (SMA 00-3465, 2000); (3)2001 Monitoring the Future Study; (4) American Journal of Psychiatry, December 2000; (5) Drugs - Third Edition, Schlaadt, Shannon, Prentice Hall, 1990; (6) Marijuana and Health, Ninth Report to U.S. Congress; (7) Modern Synopsis of Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry/II, Freedman, Kaplan, Sadock, Williams and Wilkins; 1980; (8) Mind Over Matter, National Institute on Drug Abuse publication #98-3592, December 1997; (9) Marijuana in the Nineties, D. Ohlms, MD, AMS Video Resources; (10) Drugs - Third Edition, Schlaadt, Shannon, Prentice Hall, 1990; (11) Side Effects of Simultaneous Alcohol and Marijuana Use, Sulkowski, Vachon, American Journal of Psychiatry; 134, June 1977; (12) Drugs in Society: A Biological Perspective, Jones-Witters, Witters, Wadsworth Health Services, 1983; (13) Marijuana: Right Stuff, Harvard Medical School Health Letter 14, November 1988; (14) Drugs - Third Edition, Schlaadt, Shannon, Prentice Hall, 1990; (15) Drugs of Abuse, US Department of Justice Drug Enforcement Administration, 1997 Edition; (16) Marijuana: Right Stuff, Harvard Medical School Health Letter 14, November 1988; (17) Marijuana and the Lungs, Doyle, American Lung Association Bulletin No. 65, November 1979; (18) Marijuana, W.R. Spence, MD, Health Edco, 1992; (19) Marijuana in the Nineties, D. Ohlms, MD, AMS Video Resources; (20) The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Drugs: Marijuana - Its Effects on Mind and Body; Hermes, Galperin, Chelsea House Publishers; 1992; (21) Drugs in Society: A Biological Perspective, Jones-Witters, Witters, Wadsworth Health Services, 1983; (22) Drugs in Society: A Biological Perspective, Jones-Witters, Witters, Wadsworth Health Services, 1983; (23) Drugs in Society: A Biological Perspective, Jones-Witters, Witters, Wadsworth Health Services, 1983; (24) Skinner, M.H., Thompson D.A., Pharmacologic consideration in the treatment of substance abuse, South Medical Journal 85 (12) 1207-19,1992; (25) Drugs and Drug Abuse, A Reference Text, second edition, Addiction Research Foundation, 1987; (26) Drugs and Drug Abuse, A Reference Text, second edition, Addiction Research Foundation, 1987; (27) Psychiatric Symptoms in Male Cannabis Users not using other Illicit Drugs, Troisi, Pasini, Saacco, Spalletta, Addiction, 93(4) April 1998; (28) Cannabis use correlates with schizotypy in healthy people, Williams, Wellman, Rawlins, Addiction, 91(6), June 1996; (29) The human toxicity of marijuana, Nahas, Latour, Medical Journal of Australia 156(7), April 1992; (30) Marijuana use, introspectiveness, and mental health; Zablocki, Aidala, Hansell, White; Journal of Health and Social Behavior 32(1); March 1991; (31) Substance-dependent, conduct-disordered adolescent males: severity of diagnosis predicts 2-year outcome, Crowley, Miikulich, MacDonald, Young, Zerbe, Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 49(3), February 1, 1998; (32) Treated delinquent boys substance use: onset, pattern, relationship to conduct and mood disorders, Young, Mikulich, Goodwin, Hardy, Martin, Zoccolillo, Crowley, Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 37(2) February 1995; (33) Correlates of Depression in Primary Care, Rowe, Fleming, Barry, Manwell, Kropp, Journal of Family Practice, 41(6), December 8, 1995; (34) Health aspects of cannabis, Hollister; Journal of Pharmacological Review, 1986, 38(1); (35)The general pharmacology of cannabinoids in eds Cannabis and its derivatives, Paton, Pertwee, Temple, Oxford University Press, 1972; (36) Neurobiology of marijuana abuse, Abood, Martin, Trends in Pharmacological Sciences, 13(5), May 1992 (9); (37) The association of anti-social personality symptoms with marijuana abuse/dependence. A Monozygotic co-twin study, Scherrer, Lin,Eisen, Goldberg, True, Lyons, Tsuang; Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders; 184(10); October 1996; (38) Anti-social behavior: Its relation to Selected Sociodemographic Variables and Alcohol and Drug Use Among Mexican Students, Substance Use and Misuse, Vol 33 (7)1998; (39) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, American Psychiatric Association, 1994; (40) NIDA Notes, Jan/Feb 1996; (41) Ibid; (42) NIDA Notes Nov/Dec 1995; March/April 1996; (43) Effects of Chronic Marijuana Use on Human Cognition, Block, R. & Ghoneim, M., Psychopharmacology, Vol. 110, 1993; (44) NIDA Notes May/June 1996; (45) Alcohol and Drug Use Among College Students in New York State, NYS Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services, 1996; (46) Lancet Heath News, 14th Issue, Nov. 13, 1998; (47) NIDA Addiction Research Center Report; (48) Reality Check, Marijuana Backgrounder, Prevention Pipeline, January/February 1997; (49) Drugs and Crime, Drug Abuse Update, National8888 Families in Action, Issue 62, Fall 1997; (49A) Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Weekly, July 2, 2002; (50) Say it straight: The Medical Myths of Marijuana, Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America; (51) Marijuana: Facts Parents Need to Know, National Institute of Drug Abuse, revised November 1998; (52) Drug and Drug Abuse, A Reference Text, Second Edition, Jacobs and O'B.Fehr, Addiction Research Foundation; 1987, (53) Cannabis Dependence, Withdrawal, and Reinforcing Effects Among Adolescents with Conduct Symptoms and Substance Use Disorders; Drug and Alcohol Dependence, Vol. 50(1), 1998; (54) Ibid; (55) Strategies for breaking marijuana dependence, Zweben, Oconnell, Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 24(2), April-June 1992; (56) Adverse Effects of Cannabis, Hall, Solowij; Lancet 1998, 352; (57) Smoking Pot: The Hidden Addiction, Japenge, A., Los Angeles Times, May 29, 1991; (58) Marijuana: Hit Below the Belt, Waite, K., Listen, 43(6), 1990; (59) New York State Division of Substance Abuse Services; (60) Newcombe and Bentler, 1988, as reported in World Health Organization Project on Health Implications of Cannabis Use, 1999; (61) World Health Organization Project on Health Implications of Cannabis Use, 1999; (62) Holister, L.E., Health Aspects of Cannabis, Pharmacological Reviews, American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 1986; (63) Holister, Health Aspects of Cannabis; (64) Cocaine, Marijuana, Designer Drugs: Chemistry, Pharmacology and Behavior, Redda et al., Florida, CRC Press, 1989; (65) Jones, R.T., Marijuana: Health and Treatment Issues, Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1984; (66) Holister, Health Aspects of Cannabis; (67)as reported in Substance Abuse Funding News, October 28, 1996, No. 96-20; (68) the Ottawa Prenatal Prospective Study as reported in the Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Drugs: Marijuana: Its Effects on Mind & Body, Chelsea House Publishers, 1992; (69) Prenatal Exposure to Tobacco and Marijuana: Effects During Pregnancy, Infancy and Early Childhood, Fried, Peter, Clinical Obsteretics and Gynecology, 36:319-337, 1993.
Research and original position paper provided by the Council on Alcoholism and other Chemical Dependencies of the Finger Lakes and reprinted with permission.

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