history of cannabis and mental illness/insanity

Medicinal & health benefits of cannabis
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history of cannabis and mental illness/insanity

Post by duke »

link to source https://hempedification.wordpress.com/2 ... -insanity/
HISTORY OF CANNABIS AND INSANITY

Tobacco and pipe shop, Cairo Egypt, 1860-1880
A recurrent issue in the debate on whether or not to prohibit Cannabis is the supposed link between Cannabis and insanity, or as the debate evolved, Cannabis and psychosis / schizophrenia. Since the 1840’s Cannabis has been accused of triggering insanity and hailed as a cure for it. One of the key components of Cannabis, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), might sometimes induce ‘psychosis-like’ effects, such as anxiety and transient paranoia, but they are not schizophrenia. Persistent Cannabis use (or that of any kind of ‘psychoactive’ substance) may precipitate psychosis in individuals with genetically predisposing factors and complicate or worsen symptoms in a person with schizophrenia, but there is no evidence it can cause psychosis. However, key components in Cannabis provide powerful anti-psychotic and anti-anxiety properties, so effective they “may be a future therapeutic option in psychosis, in general and in schizophrenia, in particular”. This might explain why people with schizophrenia or those predisposed to psychotic symptoms report relief after using Cannabis.

Although the number of users has increased and the average strength of Cannabis has risen significantly, the numbers of people being diagnosed with schizophrenia has remained stable over time. That is not to say Cannabis is completely harmless, but the purported harms are temporary, over-exaggerated and with other environmental factors, such as alcohol for instance, frequently overlooked. A systematic review of epidemiological data on Cannabis ‘dependence’ (1990-2008) indicates: the modest increase in risk and the low prevalence of schizophrenia mean that regular Cannabis use accounts for only a very small proportion of the disability associated with schizophrenia. From a population health perspective, this raises doubt about the likely impact of preventing Cannabis use on the incidence or prevalence of schizophrenia […]. However, the objective here is not to review all the often conflicting evidence on the relation between Cannabis and psychosis, but how one argument, that Cannabis causes insanity, prevailed.


Women smoking a water pipe in North Africa, 1860’s
This position prevailed despite the lack of evidence to substantiate the claim over-riding significant doubts about the relationship that existed from the beginning of the debate. One of the earliest inquiries, by the colonial government of India in 1872, did indeed conclude habitual ganja use tended to produce insanity, but a careful examination of the evidence presented in the reports underlying that conclusion shows the alleged relationship lacked “solid or sound foundations” and its accuracy was often disputed by medical officers. However, “bad information, administrative expedience and colonial misunderstandings of a complex society” turned into statistics and the statistics provided the “evidence” that Cannabis led to mental illness. The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission in 1894 was instigated by claims the lunatic asylums of India were filled with ganja smokers. After extensive research into the nature of asylum statistics the majority of the Commission members agreed “that the effect of hemp ‘drugs’ in this respect had hitherto been greatly exaggerated”.

Most medical doctors involved were convinced Cannabis use did not cause insanity, but rather stimulated a mental illness that “was already lurking in the mind of the individual” and that alcohol played at least an equal if not a more important role. That conclusion seems to summarise current opinions about the relationship between Cannabis and psychosis. The dramatic announcements on the mental health implications of Cannabis use by the Egyptian delegate Mohammed El Guindy at the Geneva conference had a significant impact on the deliberations to include Cannabis in the 1925 Convention. El Guindy produced statistics supporting his claims that 30-60% of cases of insanity were caused by hashish. In a subsequent Memorandum with reference to hashish as it concerned Egypt, submitted by the Egyptian delegation to support El Guindy, the figure was even more alarming, claiming “about 70% of insane people in lunatic asylums in Egypt are hashish eaters or smokers”.

Cannabis shop in Khandesh, India, late-19th century.
Cannabis shop, Khandesh India, late 1800’s
The 1920-21 annual report of the Abbasiya Asylum in Cairo, the larger of Egypt’s two mental hospitals only attributed 2.7% of its admissions to Cannabis and even that modest number represented “not, strictly speaking, causes, but conditions associated with the mental disease”.

El Guindy’s figures were probably based on the observations of John Warnock, the head of the Egyptian Lunacy Department from 1895-1923, published in an article in the Journal of Mental Science in 1924. However, as historian James Mills showed, Warnock made broad generalisations about Cannabis and its users despite that those he saw were only the small proportion of them in hospitals. Whether this was an accurate picture of Cannabis use in Egypt did not seem a relevant question to him. Other Egyptian statistics showed a very different picture. This tendency among some doctors to extrapolate their experiences in mental health departments to society at large was common in many studies in many countries and resulted in ignoring the fact the vast majority of Cannabis users did so without any problem. Studies often generalised cases of a few single individuals with personality disorders to make broad claims about the overall harmful effects of Cannabis.

Not all directors of mental health hospitals reached the same conclusions. The Mexican psychiatrist Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra, for instance, who earned a reputation as a result of his work with addicts in the national mental health hospital, refuted the existence of a ‘marijuana’ psychosis. In an article in 1938, entitled El mito de la marihuana (The Myth of Marijuana), he argued that assumption in public and scientific opinion was based in myth. The link of the substance with insanity, violence and crime, which had dominated the public discourse in Mexico since the 1850’s, was the result of sensational media reports and, in later years, US ‘drug’ enforcement authorities. According to Salazar, at least in Mexico, alcohol played a much more important role in the onset of psychosis and social problems. Shortly after he was appointed as head of Mexico’s Federal Narcotics Service, he told US officials the only way to stem the flow of illicit ‘drugs’ was through government controlled distribution.


Grape seller with Kif smokers, Tétouan Morocco, 1920
Due to Mexico’s 1920 Cannabis prohibition, about 80% of the ‘drug’ law violators were Cannabis users. He argued Mexico should repeal Cannabis prohibition to undercut illicit trafficking (the suppression of which he considered impossible in Mexico due to widespread corruption) and focus on the much more serious problems of alcohol and opiates. In 1939, he initiated a programme of clinics dispensing a month’s supply of opiates to addicts through a state monopoly. Salazar argued the traditional perceptions of addicts and addiction had to be revised, including “the concept of the addict as a blameworthy, anti-social individual”. In doing so, Salazar not only made an enemy of the powerful US Commissioner of Narcotics, Anslinger, who had used the alleged relation to push through the prohibitive Marijuana Tax Act, but also went against the opinions of the established medical opinion in Mexico.

Leopoldo Salazar Viniegra “had the audacity to point out certain facts that are now virtual givens in the literature on ‘drug’ policy—that prohibition merely spawned a black market whose results were much worse than ‘drug’ use itself and that, in particular, ‘marijuana’ prohibition led to the harassment and imprisonment of thousands of users who posed very little threat to society […] Though historians have correctly viewed Salazar as a victim of an increasingly imperialist US ‘drug’ policy, it has not been sufficiently emphasised that he was also a victim of Mexico’s homegrown anti-‘drug’ ideology […]”.

As a delegate to the Advisory Committee of the League of Nations and participating in its meeting in Geneva in May 1939, he saw the intolerance of and demands for prohibiting Cannabis had increased exponentially under leadership of the American delegates and allies. He infuriated Anslinger with his proposal to treat addicts in and out of prison with a morphine step-down project. In Mexico, in an article in the Gaceta Medica de México, he challenged the validity of the data relating hashish to schizophrenia in a report from Turkey submitted to the Committee. Salazar considered the then existing international ‘drug’ control conventions “as practically without effect”. His opinions opposed Washington’s punitive supply-side approach on ‘drug’ control and he stepped on too many toes nationally and internationally. The US consul general in Mexico suggested ridicule would be the best way to stop the “dangerous theories” of Salazar. After a concerted campaign in which US and Mexican officials set out to destroy him personally, the Mexican press depicted him as a madman and “propagandist for ‘marijuana’”.
https://hempedification.wordpress.com/2 ... -insanity/



Bedouin smoker, 1920
Due to the intense diplomatic and public pressures, he was forced to resign as head of the Federal Narcotics Service and was replaced by someone more complaisant in the eyes of the US State Department and the FBN. Not surprisingly, Salazar’s work was dismissed by Pablo Osvaldo Wolff in his booklet Marihuana in Latin America. Wolff, who claimed Cannabis did cause psychosis, was much more astute in assuring his opinions were dominant across the relevant UN institutions. Nevertheless, after the 1961 Single Convention was adopted, the UN Bulletin on Narcotics published a review in 1963 that shed substantial doubt on the relationship and, if there was one, about its relevance. In the review, Canadian psychiatrist H.B.M. Murphy concluded: “It is exceedingly difficult to distinguish a psychosis due to Cannabis from other acute or chronic psychoses, and several suggest that Cannabis is the relatively unimportant precipitating agent only”.

He elucidated, “it probably produces a specific psychosis, but this must be quite rare, since the prevalence of psychosis in Cannabis users is only doubtfully higher than the prevalence in general populations”. The debate continues and opinions on how and why Cannabis use is related to psychosis and schizophrenia still spark debate among medical observers today. A 2010 editorial in the International Drug Policy Journal called for a more rational approach, decrying “overemphasis on this question by policymakers has distracted from more pressing issues” and concluded they should give greater voice to the risks and harms associated with particular Cannabis policies and to the evaluation of alternative regulatory frameworks. Given the decades of research and experience with Cannabis prohibition, it seems reasonable to reorient the Cannabis policy debate based on known policy attributable harms rather than to continue to speculate on questions of causality that will not be definitively answered any time soon.


Actress Betty Blythe with water pipe, early 1920’s
Extracted and Adapted from The Rise and Decline of Cannabis Prohibition
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Re: history of cannabis and mental illness/insanity

Post by Egzoset »

Salutations Duke,
Hi everyone!

Ah, there it is!! I'm so genuinely pleased to have managed to find this post even after a long delay, such subject being just too important to ignore IMHO!! :thanks:
duke wrote:
Sat Sep 25, 2021 8:44 pm
...Cairo Egypt, 1860-1880... ...the supposed link between Cannabis and insanity, or as the debate evolved, Cannabis and psychosis / schizophrenia.
Back then there most probably were no concepts of "neuro-plasticity" evoked - much less of some "amotivational syndrome" based on an uni-directional non-reversible type - while bigotry & ignorance were rampant (and proud!). So i guess some easily impressed "doctors" simply feared the "victims", as if touching them could induce contamination irremediably... The level of "science" in dominions of the Commonwealth combined to acute populations vulnerability proved to be such temptation the politicians started to find it quite self-convenient enough in their attempt to mesmerize their respective voter opinions; which i believe explains how "Indian Hemp"/"Cannabis sativa L." got added as "Chanvre Indien" to Québec's Pharmacy Act printed only a few years later:

Image

The law book was dated 1890 but i was never able to verify about a possible piece of paper added during the preceeding 5 years (those were not printed every year), a detail i'd have to point out could happen to be politically significant considering the later nation ban of Henri-Sévérin Béland in 1923, performed by a federal-liberal doctor/senator who actually vaguely refered to this relevant piece of provincial legislation shown above. Yet the canadian confederation of 1867 clearly defines public health as a jurisdiction field belonging to the province(s), NOT Ottawa, which means a provincial "compétence" got unilaterally transfered without any public consultations nor even a debate in any of the people's houses - e.g. TWO of them!...

In any case it's absolutely grotesque to claim that's anything close to Science knowing the noble plant got juxtaposed on a "POISONS" schedule besides arsenic and cyanide! That's a proof of politic mis-guided interference never corrected even after the "Légaleezation" of Justin Trudeau. Neither during government mandates of Philippe Couillard and even less under François Legault. In other words those are NOT my friends and neither are they yours. YMMV! Even true about the "Bloc Pot" i'm afraid - another long story...
duke wrote:
Sat Sep 25, 2021 8:44 pm
That is not to say Cannabis is completely harmless, but the purported harms are temporary, over-exaggerated and with other environmental factors, such as alcohol for instance, frequently overlooked.
We can regret the trauma inflicted by adults in panic (more worried about their own selfish image than public health...), eventually causing permanent prejudice including suicide for kids in total distress.

:suicide:

Lets add to it some blatant lack of any reasonable sense of proportionality -- as a matter of fact, tained "science" still kicks strong in America despite the progression toward better justice, though at much too slow a pace judging by such striking sample of propaganda in disguise:


[ https:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-dxMTDzMLY ]
The Cannabis Question I Full Episode I PBS (2021-Sep-29)

It turns out a Google search seemed to indicate that "David H. Coch" got instrumentalized because of his pro-cannabic philanthropy (serving as a decoy), to apparently please the audience including myself.

BUT...

Most unfortunately right within the very 1st minute i was forced to observe MONEY getting associated to growers while users basically translated as SICKNESS. Which feels absolutely insulting on top of being reductionist - at least to me and you too i'll bet!

So... Welcome to the "science" of John Warnock!!

:angry:
duke wrote:
Sat Sep 25, 2021 8:44 pm
This position prevailed despite the lack of evidence... ... The dramatic announcements on the mental health implications of Cannabis use by the Egyptian delegate Mohammed El Guindy at the Geneva conference had a significant impact on the deliberations to include Cannabis in the 1925 Convention.
Image

M'yep! That's a widely accepted fact indeed, except for bigot prohibionists shamed by such horrible roots of the past. Which explains why in Canada this story has been replaced by a Nixon/1937-tax version completely exonerating the present liberal party of Trudeau exactly... And there's more!

Image

Guess who got rewarded for his "contribution(s)" with a presidency chair at the League of Nations this very same year when "Indian Hemp"/"Cannabis sativa L." somehow ended up in the Geneva Opium Convention?!... Raoul Dandurand, another liberal senator dispatched from Ottawa - a celebrated post-mortem diplomat today! Even better yet, here's the "elite" couple illustrated below:

Image

On the right side that's the president's wife, daughter of Québec's prime minister, a lady named Joséphine Marchand. She owned the periodical paper "Le coin du feu", also assuming its editorialist content besides printing it. So far so good... One peculiar detail here is that she also advocated for feminist rights - nothing wrong about it, except as such she just could not have eluded the radar of another feminist advocate who wrote a series of articles in Maclean's, published as a book only a couple years before Dandurand became president:

Image
Mrs. Nellie McClung (Stipes, centre), Mrs. Pankhurst (British, at her left), Emily Murphy (black hat & dress, right) - Edmonton (1916)

Too bad Emily F. Murphy (aka Janey Canuck), author of "The Black Candle, Marahuana -- A New Menace" (chap. XXIII, p331) is hardly noticeable in this photograph. Take note the snapshot got captured the year after she was decorated "Dame of Grace" of Saint-John of Jerusalem under King Georges, hence the family photo session in sunday clothes... Ah, and it wasn't even her last honourific rewards, on the contrary:

Image

Now lets appreciate this female magistrate's, aHummm... Most immense sense of "compassion" addressing a victim named Virginia Clin, naïvely seeking support from her via a written complaint against some hospital:

[ http:// wayback.archive-it.org/2217/20101208171131mp_/http:// www.albertasource.ca/aspenland/eng/society/article_encounter_emily_2.html ]

« If I were you, I would forget any grievance which you feel you may have, because if you brood on it, you may become insane again.
... Think kind, helpful thoughts like a good girl...
»

Disgusting once one is made aware this peculiar "elite" sample actively supporting eugenism even before it was popularized in Germany... :wtf:

No wonder Justin Trudeau's fans much prefer to erase that evil part of their common history!!

As a major side-note hint of morality-fuelled sensationalism, about consicously choosing to write "marAhuana" i must argue this peculiar orthograph clearly sounded quite a bit "fashion" in days of popular fascination of all things from India - just like "mahārāja" imagery in the British colonizing Empire...

Finally, here's the link to be made without any shadow of doubt relatively to her connection with the "science" of John Warnock:
Marahuana is known by chemists and physicians as cannibis indica, and more commonly as Indian hemp. Sometimes it is called hasheesh or hashish.

Dr. Warnock in The Journal of Mental Sciences for January, 1903, states that acute mania from hasheesh varies from "a mild, short attack of excitement to a prolonged attack of furious mania, ending in exhaustion or even death."

He describes the hasheesh user in the following words: "They are good-for-nothing lazy fellows who live by begging or stealing, and pester their relations for money to buy the hasheesh, often assaulting them, when they refuse the demands."
ZERO "Fake News" in reporting it and yet deletions are quick to happen althoug it's nothing but documented history, pure & simple. :bang head:

2nd side-note: i vaguely recall reading about rumours of "The Black Candle" being carried by boat to the League of Nations library, to be used as a "REFERENCE"! So much for the notions of science behind mental cannabis-induced sicknesses...
duke wrote:
Sat Sep 25, 2021 8:44 pm
The 1920-21 annual report of the Abbasiya Asylum in Cairo, the larger of Egypt’s two mental hospitals only attributed 2.7% of its admissions to Cannabis and even that modest number represented “not, strictly speaking, causes, but conditions associated with the mental disease”.

El Guindy’s figures were probably based on the observations of John Warnock, the head of the Egyptian Lunacy Department from 1895-1923, published in an article in the Journal of Mental Science in 1924. However, as historian James Mills showed, Warnock made broad generalisations...
I also remember the doctor depended on a translator just to communicate with his patients as a director, for whole decades if i'm not mistaking, eug... Talk about "holier-than-you" symptoms!! What a looser...
duke wrote:
Sat Sep 25, 2021 8:44 pm
Salazar not only made an enemy of the powerful US Commissioner of Narcotics, Anslinger... ... ...he challenged the validity of the data relating hashish to schizophrenia in a report from Turkey submitted to the Committee.
No problem believing that too! Not to mention USA did NOT sign the 1925 2nd Geneva Opium Convention because of internal tensions over national autonomy - and a bit of xenophobia too perhaps...

So, thank you quite a bunch mister Duke for yet another piece of the puzzle filling the gaps!! :clap:

Good day, have fun !! Image
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duke (Sun Oct 03, 2021 9:41 am)
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