Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
CBC documentary lights up possible pot, schizophrenia link
Let's set aside, for the moment, all the debate over whether marijuana is a gateway drug whose users may be propelled toward harder, more dangerous drugs.
There's a new, more sinister concern about cannabis. According to some scientists, it may be directly linked to mental illness, including schizophrenia, in young pot smokers.
brad.oswald@freepress.mb.ca
TV PREVIEW
The Downside of High
The Nature of Things
Tonight at 8
CBC
CBC's The Nature of Things takes an unsettling look at the new evidence tonight in The Downside of High (8 p.m., CBC), an hour-long documentary written and directed by Bruce Mohun and narrated by series host David Suzuki.
The Downside of High is a particularly effective examination of its subject because it straddles the line between cold, hard scientific information and up-close human experience. As an entry point to the discussion, the film's makers introduce us to three young British Columbians whose lives were sent careening sideways after they started experimenting with pot.
Each first tried smoking marijuana in the usual peer-group environment; each quickly got hooked on getting high; each soon developed deeply delusional behaviour -- hearing voices, extreme paranoia, fear and panic -- that ultimately landed them in hospital psychiatric wards for extended stays.
And each, along with the doctors who have helped them in the slow effort to rebuild their lives, is convinced that their mental illnesses were triggered by marijuana use.
That's where the scientists come in.
The Downside of High examines the work of several researchers who have studied the link between pot and schizophrenia, beginning with a groundbreaking 1987 Swedish study that followed 50,000 young army recruits for more than 15 years and concluded that those who used marijuana during their teen years were six times more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia during the next decade and a half of their lives.
Dutch researcher Dr. Jim Van Os included this study as he prepared a comprehensive overview of all the available data on the topic; his admittedly more conservative conclusion is still cause for concern.
"We found that cannabis use nearly doubles the risk of developing future psychotic states," he explains, "be it isolated psychotic symptoms or clinical psychotic disorders, like schizophrenia."
Van Os's research also concluded that teens who begin using marijuana before the age of 15 may be four times as likely to develop schizophrenia.
Part of the problem, according to The Downside of High, is the fact pot growers -- including the "B.C. Bud" purveyors who call Canada's West Coast home -- continue to develop new breeds of weed that are exponentially more potent than the "harmless" pot that fuelled 1960s and '70s counterculture.
In addition to containing much higher levels of THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), marijuana's active (and sometimes psychosis-producing) agent, new strains of pot also contain much less CBD (cannabidiol), which is thought to protect pot users against the drug's psychosis-inducing properties.
Van Os and other scientists have also found evidence that there's a genetic link that makes some people much more likely to suffer marijuana-induced mental illness; some of the most current research is aimed at developing an accurate test that might allow parents to learn whether their teenagers are part of the high-risk group when it comes to pot and mental-health problems.
As one might expect in a film focused on scientific research, nothing here is completely conclusive. Not all scientists agree on the cause-effect relationship; not all pot users are at risk of encountering mental illness. But there certainly is much to consider in The Downside of High, especially for parents and teens who find themselves standing at a much different gateway than they ever thought the issue of recreational drug use might create.
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 28, 2010 D3
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
The comment period for this story has ended.
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to TV
-
Flood Watch 2010
News and information about flooding in the Red River Valley.
-
CON >< CUSSIONS
Examining hockey head injuries
-
Random Acts of Kindness
Your encounters with goodness
-
Open Secrets
Red River students mine government data banks
-
Miss Lonelyhearts
Maureen Scurfield offers life advice
Poll
Most Popular
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Should the province spend $3.1 million to keep Greyhound inter-city bus service in Manitoba?
- Burning question over dead wood
- Arrest warrant issued for 'Laughing Girl'
- Porn actress Joslyn James releases sexually graphic messages she says came from Tiger Woods
- Move, then be quiet about cash
- 16-year-old boy charged with making racial comment over intercom at New Jersey Walmart
- Missing BlackBerry held priceless memories
- Teens urged to 'pee in a cup'
- Convicted Somali refugee ordered deported last fall arrested in Winnipeg
- She's not laughing anymore
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- Mild again, but enjoy it while it lasts
- Freedom for Li expected
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Gesturing rudely at OPP while in possession of stolen goods: not a good idea
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- Off-duty officer stops assault on Transit driver
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Crusader up for Nobel Prize
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Students could be punished
- Not wrong, just illegal
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- Mr. Matas a worthy nominee
- She's not laughing anymore
- What should happen to two teachers who performed a sexually suggestive dance routine in front of students?
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Province gives Greyhound $3M
- Ottawa will pay to airlift supplies to reserves caught short by early winter-road melt
- Burning question over dead wood
- Missing BlackBerry held priceless memories
- Don't seek mom's approval when you're making plans
- Beefed-up kindergarten shelved
- Border agency looks at giving guns to airport officers
- Convicted Somali refugee ordered deported last fall arrested in Winnipeg
- Northern towns breathe easier
- Manitoba considers options for huge H1N1 vaccine surplus
- She's not laughing anymore
- Freedom for Li expected
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- City may open diamond lanes to more users
- He can escape her verbal abuse
- Gesturing rudely at OPP while in possession of stolen goods: not a good idea
- Play nice in your neighbour's dust
- Liberals say cutting MP mailings would save $10 million a year
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Charges considered in machete attack
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- She's not laughing anymore
- Students could be punished
- Police shoot and kill suspect
- Freedom for Li expected
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
- Wielding a weapon costs a life
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- More ominous issue underlies Youth for Christ flap
- Canadian women's hockey team stunned by reaction to post-gold party
- Winnipeg Sun editor charged with child pornography
- Province's credit unions oblivious to downturn
- Derry to be different
- Price soldiers on despite woes for manufacturing industry
- Zellers to move into Bay basement
- Rice of the Prairies gets raves
- Oak Park snares second title Raiders rule in women's high school hockey
- Giant Wal-Mart's footstep feared
- 16-year-old boy charged with making racial comment over intercom at New Jersey Walmart
- Wesmen varsity girls enjoy rebound season
- Eagles, Dixie Chicks to play stadium in June
- Condos at ex-Penthouse
- Grand Forks declares flood emergency
- New cutting machine breaks through ice near Selkirk
- It's the Sharks vs. the Jets in a jazzy rumble
- Man shot after chasing car thieves
- Is jet a trophy or just bad PR?
- Career Compass helps staff chart career paths
- Former prosecutor ambushed on CBC
- Ice-cutting machine to stay submerged until spring
- Text of Shane Koyczan's opening ceremonies poem, "We Are More"
- Teacher's lapdance caught on tape, watched by world
- Olympic-sized hypocrisy
- Cabela's to open across Canada
- Oprah's on, and so is our Jon!
- Online drug pioneer tumbles
- Mounties hook ice-fishers for open beer
- Not wrong, just illegal
- No listings for buyers flooding the housing market
- Second video of lap dance uncovered
PREVIOUS

0 Comments