(Press-News.org) In a Policy Forum, Dawson White and colleagues argue that international drug policy must distinguish between the coca leaf – a sacred plant long cultivated in South America – and its purified chemical derivative, cocaine. The World Health Organization’s Expert Committee on Drug Dependence (ECDD) is now reassessing the plant’s status, which, according to the authors, presents a rare opportunity to realign global drug policy with scientific evidence and Indigenous rights. Currently, the coca bush is classified under international law as a Schedule I drug, a group that also includes cocaine and heroin. While these drugs have a well-documented history of addiction and harm, the coca leaf has served for millennia as a mild, nonaddictive stimulant and an important element of Andean and Amazonian cultural life. Moreover, research in both biological and social sciences confirms the coca leaf’s safety and cultural significance, underscoring its profound difference from cocaine. Under the 1961 UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, all species of the coca genus were indiscriminately banned, effectively criminalizing the traditions and livelihoods of more than 11 million Indigenous and mestizo people. This legal framework not only stigmatized cultural practices but also stifled scientific study of the coca plant. Given the ECDD’s forthcoming recommendation, White et al. call for a reevaluation of the plant that recognizes traditional use, alongside scientific evidence, which could lead to more just and robust policies that respect both cultural heritage and scientific understanding. “Descheduling coca would correct a long-standing scientific and legal misclassification, uphold the rights of Indigenous and other coca-growing communities, and enable evidence-based regulation informed by traditional knowledge,” write the authors.
END
Rescheduling coca: Aligning global drug policy with science, tradition, and indigenous rights
Summary author: Walter Beckwith
2025-10-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
BIOFAIR roadmap for an integrated biological and environmental data network
2025-10-15
The Biodiversity Collections Network (BCoN), in collaboration with the American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS), has developed a comprehensive roadmap toward an integrated biological and environmental data network. The initiative, known as the Building an Integrated, Open, Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (BIOFAIR) Data Network project, addresses the urgent need to connect fragmented data held in biodiversity collections and other biological and environmental data repositories to tackle pressing societal challenges, including biodiversity loss, climate change, invasive ...
SwRI, 8 Rivers patent more cost-effective, efficient power generation system with liquid oxygen storage
2025-10-15
SAN ANTONIO — October 15, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and 8 Rivers have patented a system that leverages fluctuations in energy demand by using liquid oxygen storage (LOX) to make power plants more cost-effective and efficient. To accomplish this, the Institute modified a recently developed power cycle, the Allam-Fetvedt Cycle, which combusts fuel, like natural gas, using an oxygen and carbon dioxide mixture to allow complete carbon capture, producing minimal greenhouse gas emissions.
The Allam-Fetvedt Cycle ...
A sacred leaf on trial: Scientists urge WHO to support decriminalizing coca
2025-10-15
For thousands of years, people in the Andes have chewed the leaves of the coca plant to stave off hunger, treat altitude sickness, and sustain energy. Yet under international law, this ancient crop is treated as harshly as cocaine and fentanyl. Now, scientists say it’s time to end that contradiction.
A new international perspective published in Science argues that scientific evidence clearly supports the coca leaf as a benign, useful, and culturally paramount crop plant that should be removed from the list of Schedule I substances – where it currently ...
World’s largest superconducting fusion system will use American technology to measure the plasma within
2025-10-15
When the experimental fusion system known as JT-60SA comes online in 2026, it will be the world’s largest fusion machine: a crowning achievement for Japan and Europe, which partnered to build it. Now, the research team has turned to the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) for critical measurement equipment.
The effort is part of a new agreement between PPPL, the National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST) of Japan and Europe’s Fusion for Energy (F4E), allowing for broader collaboration between the researchers.
“PPPL is among the first U.S. institutions to have its equipment installed ...
Mount Sinai receives $4.5 million NIH award to launch a pioneering women’s environmental health research training program
2025-10-15
New York, NY (October 15, 2025) – The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has received a prestigious $4.5 million, five-year K12 award from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish a pioneering program that will train the next generation of leaders in women’s health research.
The program, called the Mount Sinai Life-course Exposomics Analytic Program (LEAP) in Women’s Health, is led by Rosalind J. Wright, MD, MPH, Dean for Public Health and Chair of the Department of Public Health at the Icahn School of Medicine. LEAP is part ...
Strong grip strength may protect against obesity-related complications
2025-10-15
WASHINGTON—People with excess body fat who build and keep muscle may be less likely to develop obesity-induced heart, liver, or kidney damage or die early, according to a new study published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Despite clear evidence that excess body fat can directly cause illness, obesity is often viewed as a risk factor for heart disease and diabetes rather than a chronic disease.
Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher. BMI is ...
How to double lung cancer screening rates
2025-10-15
Lung cancer screening might be the best-kept secret in health care today. Only about 16 percent of those who are eligible in the U.S. get screened for lung cancer, but a study coming out in NEJM Catalyst on Wednesday provides a roadmap for how health systems can improve those numbers. The study details how the UR Medicine primary care network reached a nearly 72 percent lung cancer screening rate.
“Our biggest success was not only screening a high percentage of eligible patients, but also enrolling those patients in the comprehensive program to ensure they receive the necessary annual follow-up screenings,” said Robert Fortuna, MD, ...
Researchers ‘zoom’ in for an ultra-magnified peek at shark skin
2025-10-15
Have you ever wondered what makes shark skin so tough and sleek? It’s dermal denticles – tiny, tooth-like structures that cover a shark’s skin. Made of the same material as teeth and shaped like small scales with grooves, these microscopic armor plates aren’t just for show. Dermal denticles serve important roles in helping sharks glide effortlessly, and protect their skin, especially during mating.
Although much is known, researchers still lack a full understanding of how dermal denticle shape changes across different parts of the shark’s body as it grows and if there are differences between ...
AI system finds crucial clues for diagnoses in electronic health records
2025-10-15
New York, NY [October 15, 2025]—Doctors often must make critical decisions in minutes, relying on incomplete information. While electronic health records contain vast amounts of patient data, much of it remains difficult to interpret quickly—especially for patients with rare diseases or unusual symptoms.
Now, researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and collaborators have developed an artificial intelligence system, called InfEHR, that links unconnected medical events over time, creating a diagnostic web that reveals hidden patterns. Published in the September 26 online issue of Nature Communications, the study shows that Inference on Electronic Health ...
Gut microbiota disruption predicts severe steatosis in MASLD patients
2025-10-15
A new study in eGastroenterology links gut dysbiosis with severe steatosis in metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). In a 61-patient cohort, those with the inflammation-linked Bact2 enterotype developed severe steatosis at lower thresholds. Adding microbiota status to standard clinical tools improved diagnostic accuracy from 80% to 90%, suggesting a path toward earlier detection and personalized care.
MASLD: A Growing Global Burden
Metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
High-entropy alloy nanozyme ROS biocatalyst treating tendinopathy via up-regulation of PGAM5/FUNDC1/GPX4 pathway
SwRI’s Dr. Pablo Bueno named AIAA Associate Fellow
Astronomers detect radio signals from a black hole tearing apart a star – outside a galactic center
Locking carbon in trees and soils could help ‘stabilize climate for centuries’ – but only if combined with underground storage
New research shows a tiny, regenerative worm could change our understanding of healing
Australia’s rainforests first to switch from carbon sink to source
First-trimester mRNA COVID-19 vaccination and risk of major congenital anomalies
Glucose-lowering medication classes and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes
Rising seas and sinking cities signal a coastal crisis in China
Discovery of hundreds of new human gut viruses provides a new approach to studying the gut microbiome
Study indicates dramatic increase in percentage of US adults who meet new definition of obesity
Astrocytes are superstars in the game of long-term memory
WSU study finds positive framing can steer shoppers toward premium products
Study finds ending universal free school meals linked to rising student meal debt and stigma
Innovations in organoid engineering: Construction methods, model development, and clinical translation
Rescheduling coca: Aligning global drug policy with science, tradition, and indigenous rights
BIOFAIR roadmap for an integrated biological and environmental data network
SwRI, 8 Rivers patent more cost-effective, efficient power generation system with liquid oxygen storage
A sacred leaf on trial: Scientists urge WHO to support decriminalizing coca
World’s largest superconducting fusion system will use American technology to measure the plasma within
Mount Sinai receives $4.5 million NIH award to launch a pioneering women’s environmental health research training program
Strong grip strength may protect against obesity-related complications
How to double lung cancer screening rates
Researchers ‘zoom’ in for an ultra-magnified peek at shark skin
AI system finds crucial clues for diagnoses in electronic health records
Gut microbiota disruption predicts severe steatosis in MASLD patients
WSU project reduces hospitalizations among home health-care patients
Rain in the Sahara? UIC researchers predict a wetter future for the desert
Solar-powered lights keep sea turtles out of fishing nets
A prototype glucose battery inspired by the body’s metabolism
[Press-News.org] Rescheduling coca: Aligning global drug policy with science, tradition, and indigenous rightsSummary author: Walter Beckwith