DREHER'S JAMAICAN PREGNANCY STUDY
More Suppression of Marijuana Research
In the 1980s Melanie Dreher and colleagues at UMass Amherst began a
longitudinal study to assess the well-being of infants and children
whose mothers used cannabis during pregnancy. The researchers lived
in rural Jamaican communities among the women they were studying.
Thirty cannabis-using pregnant women were matched for age and
socio-economic status with 30 non-users. Dreher et al compared the
course of their pregnancies and their neo-natal outcomes, using
various standard scales.
No differences were detected three days after birth. At 30 days the
exposed babies did better than the non-exposed on all the scales
and significantly better on two of the scales (having to do with
autonomic stability and reflexes).
Follow-up studies were conducted when the kids were four and five
(just before entering school and after). The moms were defined as
light users (1-10 spliffs per week), moderate (11-20), and heavy
(21-70). Consumption of ganja tea was also taken into account.
The children were measured at age four using three sets of
criteria: the McCarthy scale, which measures verbal ability,
perceptivity, quantitative skills, memory and motor; a "behavioral
style" scale measuring temperament, based on a 72-item
questionnaire filled out by the child's primary caregiver; and a "quality of housing" index to indicate socioeconomic status.
"No Differences at All."
When they controlled for the household ratings, Dreher recounted
April 8 at the Patients Out of Time Conference in Santa Barbara,
her team "found absolutely no differences" between the children
whose mothers were non-users and the children from the three groups
of users. "No differences at all."
When testing the children at age five, Dreher measured school
attendance and introduced an additional measure, the "home scale,"
accounting for stimulation in the physical and language
environment, and other inputs affecting development. " Low income
Jamaican children do not have a lot of toys," Dreher noted, "but It
is not unusual for a two-and-a-half year old to be washing out her
father's handkerchiefs to learn some adult skills."
As with the age-four studies, no differences were found among the
exposed and non-exposed groups. But analysis of the home scale
revealed that "stimulation with toys, games, reading material" was
significantly related to measures on the McCarthy scale -verbal,
perceptual, memory, and general cognition- and to mood. There was
also a relationship between basic school attendance and
McCarthy-scale measurements.
"We can't conclude that there is necessarily no impact from
prenatal ganja use but we can conclude that the child who attends
basic school regularly, is provided with a variety of stimulating
experiences at home, who is encouraged to show mature behavior, has
a profoundly better chance of performing at a higher level on the
skills measured by the McCarthy scale whether or not his or her
mother used ganja during pregnancy," said Dreher.
"Hello, hello! If you go to school you're going to do better on
these criteria. It doesn't sound like a very interesting finding
but given what everybody else was finding, we thought it was pretty
darned interesting."
After recounting her methodology and conclusions, Dreher said: "This study was published in 1991 -15 years ago. What is the impact
of this study? Absolutely none! A recent article by Huizink and
Mulder reviewing all the literature on cannabis use in pregnancy
reports only two longitudinal cohorts -Peter Fried's Ottawa
Prenatal Prospective study and Richardson and Day's Maternal Health
Practices and Child Development study. They reported increased
tremors and startles (Fried); altered sleep patterns (R&D); signs
of stress (Lester); impulsive and hyperactive behavior at six years
old, more delinquent behavior, more impulsive behavior..." The
review article didn't even mention that Dreher's Jamaican findings
differed from those cited!
Peter Fried has been the darling of the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, well funded for decades after discovering that children
whose mothers had smoked marijuana showed impaired "executive
function." In 2003 Fried was asked by Ethan Russo, MD, to
contribute a review article to a book on Women and Marijuana.
Fried's reference to the Jamaican study in the Russo book did not
identify it as a longitudinal study, even though he had been a
consultant to the project.
When Dreher sought funding to re-examine her cohort at ages nine
and 10, "NIDA said they were not interested in funding this study
anymore, but if I made Peter Fried a co-principal investigator,
they would consider funding it... So, the research has languished.
Which is a shame." She's looking for alternative funding. Last
summer Dreher returned to Jamaica and located 40 of her original
subjects. They are now adults and many are parents. "They are doing
quite well," she generalized.
Dreher criticized the media response to research, which tends to
focus on alleged negative aspects of use. "Peter Fried himself has
said 'very little impact up to three years old. Beyond that age, no
impact on IQ. No relationship of marijuana use to miscarriage, to
Apgar status, to neonatal complications, physical abnormalities, no
impact on cognitive outcomes' until, he says, age four. His tremor
and startles findings did not hold up," said Dreher, "neither did
[his findings of differences in] head circumference, motor
development and language expression. None of those data are really
in the literature for people to see. This results in a lot of
misunderstanding on the part of the public."
Dreher asked: Why the reluctance to acknowledge this study in the
peer-reviewed literature? She answered first as an anthropologist: "There is a terrible arrogance and ethnocentrism in the science
that refuses to accept the experience or the science of other
cultures." She cited Ethan Russo's "irrefutable" review of cannabis
use by women in other cultures.
"Contemporary evidence from the UK, Denmark, Jamaica, Israel, the
Netherlands, even Canada tends to be disregarded unless it's funded
by NIDA with Peter Fried as the principal investigator."
Dreher recommended a 1989 Lancet article called "The Bias Against
the Null Hypothesis" in which the authors reviewed all the
abstracts about the maternal use of cocaine submitted to the
Society of Pediatric Research in the 1980s. Only 11% of negative
abstracts (attributing no harm to cocaine) were accepted for
publication, whereas 57% of the positive abstracts were accepted.
The authors determined that the rejected negative papers were
superior methodologically to the accepted positive papers.
Honest Research Impeded
Dreher decried "the politics of trying to get published." She now
sees it as "a miracle" that Pediatrics published her work on
neonatal outcomes, however belatedly, in 1994. (Her paper on
five-year outcomes came out in the West Indian Medical Journal
before Pediatrics ran the neonatal outcomes.) She suspects that a
review of "all the fugitive literature that's out there that didn't
get published" would convey "a very different picture of prenatal
cannabis exposure."
Honest research is also impeded, Dreher said, by "the politics of
building a research career. Most research is done by academics and
academia is a very conservative environment where tenure often is
more important than truth." (Dreher is now Dean of the College of
Nursing at the University of Iowa.)
The end result of biased science, Dreher observed, is a misinformed
public. Recently, she "googled to see what was out there for the
general public regarding pregnancy and marijuana." Typical of the
disinformation was an article entitled "Exposure to marijuana in
womb may harm brain' that began "Over the past decade several
studies have linked behavior problems and lower IQ scores in
children to prenatal use of marijuana..." A reference to Dreher
said she had "written extensively on the benefits of smoking
marijuana while smoking pregnant!"
Dreher concluded: "Marijuana use by pregnant women is a big red
herring that prevents us from looking at the impoverished
conditions in which women throughout the world have to bear and
raise children. These women are looking for the cheapest, most
available substance to alleviate their morning sickness and to give
them a better sleep at night in order to get the energy to do the
work they have to do every day in order to support those children.
"A red herring is something that distracts us from what's really
important. Instead of restricting our search for relatively narrow
outcomes, such as exectuive funciton, we need to be looking at
school performance, peer relations, leadership skills in children,
prenatal and family relations, healthy lifestyles. Are they
participating in sports? Are they using tobacco and alcohol and
other substances?
"NIDA and the NIH still prefer to fund randomized clinical trials
that have to do with symptom management in specific diseases. We
need research on how marijuana affects the quality of life.
"It's not an evolutionary accident that the two activities needed
to sustain life and perpetuate life, eating and sex, are
pleasurable as well as functional, and that marijuana enhances both
of these activities."
FDA Further Discredits Itself
The Food and Drug Administration issued a groundless "statement"
April 20 asserting that "no scientific studies" supported the
medical use of marijuana. The statement was not the work of a panel
of experts reviewing recent research. It was issued, supposedly, in
response to numerous Congressional inquiries, but actually at the
behest of the DEA and the Drug Czar's Office. Its release on 4/20,
a day of special significance to marijuana users, shows the
juvenility of its authors, who apparently regard Prohibition as a
little game they're playing with the American people. (Legend has
it that four twenty was the time that pot smokers at Tamalpais High
School in Mill Valley got together. Or was it the police code for a
pot bust in New Jersey? In any case, millions of cannabis consumers
are hip to its meaning, and so are those wags at the Drug Czar's office.)
NORML was holding its annual meeting in San Francisco when the FDA
issued its statement, and although predictable expressions of
outrage were forthcoming, the additional media attention was not
unwelcome. More than three quarters of the American people know
that marijuana has medical utility, so the FDA statement further
undermined the credibility of the government. (This is the same FDA
that recently approved a stimulant patch for kids with "Attention
Deficit Disorder" even though the patch has induced fatal heart
attacks.) In the days ahead we can expect a wave of op-eds and
letters to the editor referencing the thousands of relevant studies
on the medical efficacy of cannabis.
The New York Times played the FDA-statement story at the top of the
front page 4/21. Reporter Gardiner Harris included three strong
quotes refuting the government line, ending with Dr. Daniele
Piomelli, a professor of pharmacology at the University of
California, Irvine, who said he had "never met a scientist who
would say that marijuana is either dangerous or useless."