Meth Myths

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
...
Columbia neuropsychopharmacologist Carl Hart explores that puzzle in a new report that aims to separate fact from fiction on the subject of methamphetamine. Hart and his two co-authors—University of North Carolina at Wilmington philosopher Don Habibi and Joanne Csete, deputy director of the Open Society Global Drug Policy Program—argue that hyping the hazards posed by meth fosters a punitive and counterproductive overreaction similar to the one triggered by the crack cocaine panic of the 1980s, the consequences of which still afflict our criminal justice system. "The data show that many of the immediate and long-term harmful effects caused by methamphetamine use have been greatly exaggerated," Hart et al. write, "just as the dangers of crack cocaine were overstated nearly three decades ago."

The report, published by the Open Society Foundations, begins by considering the addictive potential of methamphetamine. Despite all the talk of a "meth epidemic," the drug has never been very popular. "At the height of methamphetamine's popularity," Hart et al. write, "there were never more than a million current users of the drug in the United States. This number is considerably lower than the 2.5 million cocaine users, the 4.4 million illegal prescription opioid users, or the 15 million marijuana smokers during the same period." Furthermore, illicit methamphetamine use had been waning for years at the point when Newsweek identified "The Meth Epidemic" as "America's New Drug Crisis."

Although methamphetamine is commonly portrayed as irresistible and inescapable, it does not look that way when you examine data on patterns of use. Of the 12.3 million or so Americans who have tried it, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), about 1.2 million (9.4 percent) have consumed it in the last year, while less than half a million (3.6 percent) have consumed it in the last month (the standard definition of "current" use). In other words, more than 96 percent of the people who have tried "the most addictive drug known to mankind" are not currently using it even as often as once a month. A 2009 study based on NSDUH data found that 5 percent of nonmedical methamphetamine consumers become "dependent" within two years. Over a lifetime, Hart et al. say, "less than 15 percent" do.

Even heavy methamphetamine users have more self-control than is commonly thought, as Hart's own research shows:

Under one condition, methamphetamine-dependent individuals were given a choice between taking a big hit of methamphetamine (50 mg) or $5 in cash. They chose the drug on about half of the opportunities. But when we increased the amount of money to $20, they almost never chose the drug.

Laboratory research also has found that "d-amphetamine and methamphetamine produce nearly identical physiological and behavioral effects," Hart et al. write. "They both increase blood pressure, pulse, euphoria, and desire to take the drug in a dose-dependent manner. Essentially, they are the same drug." That observation helps put methamphetamine's risks in perspective, since d-amphetamine, a.k.a. dextroamphetamine, is one of the main ingredients in Adderall, a stimulant widely prescribed for ADHD. Hart et al. note that methamphetamine, like dextroamphetamine, increases heart rate and blood pressure, but "well below levels obtained when engaged in a rigorous physical exercise."

When given to research subjects, "the drug didn't keep people up for consecutive days, it didn't dangerously elevate their vital signs, nor did it impair their judgment." Contrary to tales of meth-induced murder and mayhem, "There is no empirical evidence that suggests that even long-term users of methamphetamine pose a threat to those around them." Hart et al. note that "incredible anecdotes are usually disseminated uncritically by the popular press and accepted as sound evidence by an undiscerning public." One example from my book Saying Yes: In 1994 Reader's Digest described the rape and murder of an 18-month-old girl in California as a "meth-related child killing." Yet neither newspaper coverage of the case nor the California Supreme Court's 87-page decision rejecting the murderer's appeal made any mention of the drug.

What about long-term effects? Shocking as it may be to anyone who has accepted at face value the gruesome images featured in anti-meth propaganda, the drug does not make you ugly. "Meth mouth"—the extreme tooth decay supposedly characteristic of heavy users—is said to be caused by meth-induced dry mouth. Yet widely consumed prescription stimulants such as Adderall produce the same side effect, Hart et al. note, and "there are no published reports of unattractiveness or dental problems associated with their use." Allegedly meth-related physical characteristics such as rotten teeth, thinning hair, and bad complexions, they say, "are more likely related to poor sleep habits, poor dental hygiene, poor nutrition and dietary practices."

Hart also questions research linking heavy methamphetamine use to brain damage. He argues that studies in which large doses are repeatedly given to animals that have never been exposed to the drug before bear little resemblance to human consumption patterns, which feature gradual escalation. "This difference is not trivial," Hart et al. write, "because the harmful neurobiological and behavioral changes that occur in response to repeated large doses of methamphetamine can be prevented with prior exposure to several days of escalating doses."

In studies of people, Hart says, researchers exaggerate the practical significance of their findings and fail to properly control for pre-existing difference between meth users and the general population. "The brain imaging literature is replete with a general tendency to characterize any brain differences as dysfunction caused by methamphetamine," Hart et al. write, "even if differences are within the normal range of human variability."

Over-the-top warnings about methamphetamine—encapsulated in the slogan "Meth: Not Even Once"—aim to scare people away from a drug that might harm them (but probably won't). By contrast, Hart argues, exaggerating the hazards posed by methamphetamine causes definite damage by encouraging harsh criminal penalties (such as a five-year mandatory minimum for five grams), fostering distrust of accurate warnings about drugs, suppressing useful information that could reduce drug-related harm, driving users toward more dangerous routes of administration (as efforts to reduce meth purity, if successful, predictably would do), and justifying ineffective policies that impose substantial costs on large numbers of people for little or no benefit (such as restrictions on the methamphetamine precursor pseudoephedrine, a cheap, safe, and effective decongestant that is now absurdly difficult to obtain). In other words, hyperbole hurts.

Hyperbole Hurts: The Surprising Truth About Methamphetamine - Forbes
 
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officeguy

Well-Known Member
Oh good grief. Everything is a ####ing lawsuit waiting to happen.

I took out some.

Not a lawsuit, but very expensive C&D orders to the owner of the site. What you are doing puts them into an indefensible situation if one of the copyright lawyers web-crawlers detects entire articles cut and pasted onto this site. I am suprised they haven't booted you off yet.
 

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
Not a lawsuit, but very expensive C&D orders to the owner of the site. What you are doing puts them into an indefensible situation if one of the copyright lawyers web-crawlers detects entire articles cut and pasted onto this site. I am suprised they haven't booted you off yet.

This is the one article I posted in entirety. I wasn't aware of C&D rules.

I am suprised I haven't been booted either.
 

b23hqb

Well-Known Member
I'll be sure to pass this info on to E Hillsborough county, along with the Pasco and Polk County trailer parks, and all dental offices in between.:killingme
 
C

czygvtwkr

Guest
A lot of people that get hooked on things need something in their life, be it alcohol, drugs, chronic masturbation just to blame their own failure on. Some people use cults, religion, etc.

My best friend got a DUI and part of his punishment was attending AA for a year and he told me some of the best stories about the typical person at those things. He said most of the people would get up there and say stuff like "I got out of bed today and did the dishes, it was a really productive day". He drank more than any person I know but was highly functional (PhD in biochemistry and the lead drug scientist for one of the US's biggest pharmaceutical companies). His impression was these people would have done something else if not alcohol.
 

Larry Gude

Strung Out
A lot of people that get hooked on things need something in their life, be it alcohol, drugs, chronic masturbation just to blame their own failure on. Some people use cults, religion, etc.

My best friend got a DUI and part of his punishment was attending AA for a year and he told me some of the best stories about the typical person at those things. He said most of the people would get up there and say stuff like "I got out of bed today and did the dishes, it was a really productive day". He drank more than any person I know but was highly functional (PhD in biochemistry and the lead drug scientist for one of the US's biggest pharmaceutical companies). His impression was these people would have done something else if not alcohol.

That's a interesting point. Hell, look at us. Were we born to get up five days a week, get in the car, go to some job in order to make enough money to get up and get in the car and go back to some job every day?

It's interesting the routines we people will fill our lives with.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
Were we born to get up five days a week, get in the car, go to some job in order to make enough money to get up and get in the car and go back to some job every day?


I need an intervention, I'd like to break this habit

:buddies:
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
Smoking tobacco will kill you and everyone around you, but meth is harmless...

Okay.

I guess they photoshopped all those pics of meth addicts and made up the stories about celebrities who've bottomed out on meth. I hate it when they lie to me.
 

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
Smoking tobacco will kill you and everyone around you, but meth is harmless...

Okay.

I guess they photoshopped all those pics of meth addicts and made up the stories about celebrities who've bottomed out on meth. I hate it when they lie to me.

Not sure where you got that from.
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
Not sure where you got that from.

According to the article you posted and the paragraphs you highlighted, meth is not addictive, isn't physically harmful, doesn't impair your judgment, doesn't rot your teeth or cause any other physical decay, and it probably won't harm you.

Didn't you read before you copied and pasted? I mean, you even bolded those parts.
 

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
According to the article you posted and the paragraphs you highlighted, meth is not addictive, isn't physically harmful, doesn't impair your judgment, doesn't rot your teeth or cause any other physical decay, and it probably won't harm you.

Didn't you read before you copied and pasted? I mean, you even bolded those parts.

No, it says meth is not as addictive as we've been told, isn't as physically harmful as we've been told, doesn't impair your judgment as much as we've been told, meth alonedoesn't rot your teeth or cause any other physical decay like the pictures show, and it probably won't harm you as much as we've been told..
 
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