PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Free all non-violent criminals jailed on minor drug offences, say experts

Experts say prohibition of drugs like cocaine (pictured) unfairly targets Black communities

2021-01-08
(Press-News.org) Non-violent offenders serving time for drug use or possession should be freed immediately and their convictions erased, according to research published in the peer-reviewed The American Journal of Bioethics.

More than 60 international experts including bioethicists, psychologists and drug experts have joined forces to call for an end to the war on drugs which they argue feeds racism.

All drugs currently deemed illicit - even crack cocaine and heroin - should be decriminalized as a matter of urgency, according to this new alliance. Legalisation and regulation should then follow with restrictions on age, advertising and licensing, they say.

They have analysed evidence from over 150 studies and reports, concluding that prohibition unfairly affects Black people, damages communities, and violates the right to life as illustrated by the killing of medical worker Breonna Taylor in March 2020.

"The 'war on drugs' has explicitly racist roots and continues to disproportionately target certain communities of color," say lead study authors Brian D. Earp from the University of Oxford and Jonathan Lewis from Dublin City University.

"Drug prohibition and criminalization have been costly and ineffective since their inception. It's time for these failed policies to end.

"The first step is to decriminalize the personal use and possession of small amounts of all drugs currently deemed to be illicit, and to legalize and regulate cannabis. Policymakers should pursue these changes without further delay."

Their research adds to growing calls for drug policy reform at a time of renewed focus on injustices faced by Black people, and cannabis legalisation for recreational use by a growing list of US states.

The study is based on evidence from existing research into how drug prohibition affects users, communities and human rights, and the impact of decriminalisation by governments.

The authors found that prohibition motivates individuals to commit offences such as burglaries to fund their habit. This lowers life expectancy because people end up in prison, and triggers a 'multitude' of health-related costs from unsafe drug use.

Communities are damaged by illicit markets which undermine drug purity, with Black and Hispanic men more likely to end up in the criminal justice system. The war on drugs makes people more vulnerable to violations of their rights including what they choose to put in their bodies.

In contrast, the study highlights the liberal approach of countries such as Portugal where drug-related deaths have fallen and where users are encouraged to seek treatment.

An estimated £43.5bn ($58bn) could be generated in federal, state and local tax revenues through the legalization of drugs, according to the findings. This compares with an annual federal, state and local spend of more than £35bn ($47bn) on prohibition.

The authors stress that non-violent prisoners found with a small amount of illegal substances should be released.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Heading outdoors keeps lockdown blues at bay

2021-01-08
A new study has found that spending time outdoors and switching off our devices is associated with higher levels of happiness during a period of COVID-19 restrictions. Previous academic studies have indicated how being outdoors, particularly in green spaces, can improve mental health by promoting more positive body image, and lowering levels of depression and anxiety. Jointly led by academics from Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) in the UK, the Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences in Austria, and Perdana University in Malaysia, this new research examined how levels ...

Study finds commonly used blood pressure medications safe for COVID-19 patients

2021-01-08
PHILADELPHIA--Medications to treat high blood pressure did not affect outcomes among patients hospitalized with COVID-19, found an international team led by researchers in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. The study, published today in The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, is the first randomized controlled trial to show there is no risk for patients continuing these medications while hospitalized for COVID-19. As part of the REPLACE COVID trial, investigators examined whether ACE inhibitors (ACEIs) or Angiotensin Receptor Blockers (ARBs) -- two classes of medications to treat high blood pressure -- ...

Study: e-cigarettes trigger inflammation in the gut

Study: e-cigarettes trigger inflammation in the gut
2021-01-07
Touted by makers as a "healthy" alternative to traditional nicotine cigarettes, new research indicates the chemicals found in e-cigarettes disrupt the gut barrier and trigger inflammation in the body, potentially leading to a variety of health concerns. In the study, published Jan. 5, 2021 in the journal END ...

NYUAD study informs research of child development and learning in conflict-affected areas

2021-01-07
Abu Dhabi, UAE, January 6, 2021: To provide effective aid to children who live in areas of conflict it is necessary to understand precisely how they have been impacted by the crises around them. One area of importance is the effect of conflict and trauma on a child's development and education. In a new paper, Global TIES for Children researchers J. Lawrence Aber, Carly Tubbs Dolan, Ha Yeon Kim, and Lindsay Brown, present a review of opportunities and challenges they have encountered in designing and conducting rigorous research that advances our understanding of this effect. Global TIES for Children, an international research center based at NYU Abu Dhabi and NYU New York, generates evidence to support the most effective humanitarian and development aid to promote children's ...

New discovery sheds light on the mysterious family life of notorious sabre-toothed tiger

New discovery sheds light on the mysterious family life of notorious sabre-toothed tiger
2021-01-07
New research indicates adolescent offspring of the menacing sabre-toothed predator, Smilodon fatalis, were more momma's cubs than independent warriors. A new study by scientists at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) and University of Toronto, published January 7, 2021 in iScience¸ documents a family group of the sabre-toothed cats whose remains were discovered in present-day Ecuador. By studying the fossils, collected for the ROM in the early 1960s, the scientists were able to show that while the supersized Ice Age cats grew quite quickly, they also appeared to stay with their mother for longer than some other large cats before forging their own path. "This study started out as a simple description ...

COVID-19 accelerates cancer virtual care with quality, convenience and cost savings

2021-01-07
Patients and healthcare providers at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre rated virtual care during COVID-19 as highly satisfactory overall for quality of care and convenience, while at the same time saving patients millions in costs. Research led by Princess Margaret Radiation Oncologist Dr. Alejandro Berlin showed that virtual care can be implemented rapidly and safely across a highly-specialized and high-volume cancer centre. Eighty (80) per cent of patients reported they were either very satisfied or satisfied with it, citing convenience as a main ...

Cooling vests alleviate perceptual heat strain perceived by COVID-19 nurses

Cooling vests alleviate perceptual heat strain perceived by COVID-19 nurses
2021-01-07
Wearing cooling vests during a COVID-19 shift ensures that nurses experience less heat during their work. During their shifts, nurses wear protective clothing for three hours in a row, during which the temperature can rise to as much as 36 degrees. The cooling vests offer such effective cooling that they are now part of the standard work clothing for nurses in the COVID nursing departments at Radboud university medical center. Due to the high level of contagiousness present with COVID-19, health care personnel have to work in protective clothing that is not ...

Seafood strategies

2021-01-07
The "Executive Order on Promoting American Seafood Competitiveness and Economic Growth," issued by the Trump administration in May 2020, lays out a plan to expand the U.S. seafood industry, especially aquaculture, and enhance American seafood competitiveness in the global market. The goals of the directive are focused largely on growth and expansion of the industry, which includes wild-caught fisheries and farm-raised products, as well as recreation, processing and other industries that rely on fishing. "The seafood industry in general is worth about $200 billion and accounts for 2 million jobs in the United States," ...

COVID-19 likely lingered longer than reported in Wuhan

COVID-19 likely lingered longer than reported in Wuhan
2021-01-07
Wuhan City in China was the first place to report COVID-19 in the world and--between December 2019 and May 2020--caused nearly two-thirds of all COVID-19 cases in China. Now, researchers reporting in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases have tested more than 60,000 healthy individuals in China for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and concluded that thousands of Wuhan residents were infected with asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 after the infection was believed to be under control in China. Rapid antibody tests are used to diagnosis present and past infections with the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19; positive IgG antibodies suggests a previous infection while IgM antibodies mean a current or recent ...

Cutting COVID-19 infectious period could prevent millions of cases

Cutting COVID-19 infectious period could prevent millions of cases
2021-01-07
A new computational analysis suggests that a vaccine or medication that could shorten the infectious period of COVID-19 may potentially prevent millions of cases and save billions of dollars. The study was led by Bruce Lee along with colleagues in the Public Health Informatics, Computational, and Operations Research (PHICOR) team headquartered at the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy and the Lundquist Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, and publishes in the open-access journal PLOS Computational Biology. While much of the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Submersible robot surfs water currents

Using brain scans to forecast human choice at scale

AI’s emotional blunting effect

Modifying graphene with plasma to produce better gas sensors

Study reveals Africa will reach 1.5C climate change threshold by 2040 even under low emission scenarios

Researchers discover 16 new Alzheimer’s disease susceptibility genes

We need a new definition of dyslexia, research says

Young women suffering menopause symptoms in silence, study reveals

Rebels of health care use technology to connect with clinicians, information, and each other

Smart is sexy: evolution of intelligence partly driven by love

Have we been wrong about why Mars is red?

Screening & treating maternal psychological health key to improving cardiovascular health

Childhood trauma increases incidence of heart disease in Black women, Emory study finds

Why is Mars red? Scientists may finally have the answer

Research challenges our understanding of cancer predisposition

What makes cancer cells weak

Robots learn how to move by watching themselves

MD Anderson researchers develop novel antibody-toxin conjugate

One in ten older South Asian immigrants in Canada have hypothyroidism

Substantial portion of cancer patients in early trials access drugs that are later approved

New study calls for ethical framework to protect Indigenous genetic privacy in wastewater monitoring

Common medications may affect brain development through unexpected cholesterol disruption

Laser-powered device tested on Earth could help us detect microbial fossils on Mars

Non-destructive image sensor goes beyond bulkiness

1st Japanese version of US psychological scale for esophageal symptoms

HikingTTE: a deep learning approach for hiking travel time estimation based on personal walking ability

Environment nudges birds to fast, or slow, life lane

The U-shaped relationship between admission peripheral oxygen saturation and all-cause hospital mortality in acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a retrospective analysis using

New research highlights wide variation in prostate cancer testing between GP practices

Antidepressants linked to faster cognitive decline in dementia

[Press-News.org] Free all non-violent criminals jailed on minor drug offences, say experts
Experts say prohibition of drugs like cocaine (pictured) unfairly targets Black communities