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News (Media Awareness Project) - Wire: Kaiser Permanente research
Title:Wire: Kaiser Permanente research
Published On:1997-05-15
Fetched On:2008-09-08 16:06:33
OAKLAND(BUSINESS WIRE)March 14, 1997In an exhaustive study of ten
years of mortality data for over 65,000 men and women, Kaiser Permanente
research scientists found no statistically significant association between
marijuana smoking and death.

The study, entitled "Marijuana Use and Mortality," is being published in the
April 1997 issue of the American Journal of Public Health. The April issue,
however, was printed late and is being released this week.

The lead scientist in the research was Stephen Sidney, MD, senior
epidemiologist with the Division of Research in Kaiser Permanente's Northern
California Region.

"About onethird of the American population over the age of 12 is estimated
to have used marijuana, making it the most popular illegal drug in this
country, but we still know little about its longterm health effects," Dr.
Sidney said. "This report is the first of several to come from a major
epidemiological investigation into the health consequences of Cannabis."

The study population comprised 65,171 patients between the ages of 15 and 49
who had multiphasic health checkups at the Oakland and San Francisco Kaiser
Permanente facilities between 1979 and 1985. Based on answers about drug
use given in a confidential selfadministered research questionnaire, the
patients were divided into groups ranging from those who had never tried
marijuana to those who used it currently and regularly. Mortality statistics
for all patients were followed until 1991 and analyzed for any association
between marijuana and death. The study's statistical methodology
controlled for the use of tobacco and alcohol so that deaths from marijuana
smoking could be clearly identified.

In men, the study found, marijuana use was associated only with deaths from
AIDS. There was no significant increase in deaths from other causes.

"This doesn't mean that marijuana causes AIDS," Dr. Sidney pointed out.
"Prior research has shown that during the 1980s homosexual and bisexual men
had a higher rate of marijuana use than heterosexual men. We think this is
the reason for the link between marijuana use and AIDS. It's the sexual
activity, not smoking marijuana, that causes the disease."

The study also found that, among women, the risk of accidental death rose to
an almost statistically significant level.

"We have submitted to medical journals two more reports on marijuana use and
health, one focusing on cancer and the other on emergency room and medical
office visits for injury," Dr. Sidney said. "We expect to prepare later
this year additional reports on respiratory illness and hospitalization for
injuries."

The research study into marijuana and mortality was supported principally by
a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Additional funding came
from the National Cancer Institute and The Alcoholic Beverage Medical
Research Foundation.

In addition to Dr. Sidney, the study's authors included Irene S. Tekawa, MA,
Charles P. Quesenberry, Jr., PhD, and Gary Friedman, MD, all of Kaiser
Permanente's Division of Research; and Jerome E. Beck, DrPH, of the School of
Public Health, University of California, Berkeley.

The California Division of Kaiser Permanente is a prepaid, health maintenance
organization (HMO) serving more than 5 million members throughout the state.
The Division has approximately 6,400 physicians and 55,000 employees. It
is organized into 12 local market areas which are served by 26 major medical
centers.
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