HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Now That Marijuana Is Legal For Pain Relief
Pubdate: Tue, 31 Jul 2001
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2001, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168

NOW THAT MARIJUANA IS LEGAL FOR PAIN RELIEF

Not everyone was cheering yesterday, as Canada became the first country in 
the world to legalize doctor-prescribed marijuana for people suffering from 
terminal illnesses and chronic conditions that produce severe pain.

Among those voicing worry was the Canadian Medical Association. Police, 
too, must be wondering about enforcing laws that apply to most citizens, 
but not all. Still others perceive a slippery legal slope that will lead to 
wider drug use.

All that said, the newest amendment to the Controlled Drugs and Substances 
Act should be hailed as a useful step forward.

It was a step taken under pressure. An Ontario Court of Appeal ruling last 
year, one in a string of judgments sanctioning marijuana use for patients 
with such grave ailments as HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, cancer and severe 
arthritis, gave Ottawa until July 31 to create a legal avenue for those 
patients to obtain their dope. Under the new regulations, those patients 
may grow marijuana for their own needs or have someone else do it for them 
- -- including the government. Hence the federally funded underground 
marijuana-growing operation in Flin Flon, in northern Manitoba, which over 
the next five years expects to harvest a tonne of medium-grade pot.

None of that crop will be available until fall at the earliest. Until then, 
many of the roughly 300 individuals currently exempt from Canada's 
cannabis-possession laws (500 more applications are pending) will have to 
continue paying visits to their friendly neighbourhood dealer.

Therein lies the first, immediate problem identified by the CMA and other 
medical groups. The Flin Flon product, when it comes onstream, will have an 
expected THC content (the ingredient that gets a person high) of 5 to 7 per 
cent. On the street, however, THC levels are often a guessing game. Thus, 
for now, the physicians who authorize a sick patient's marijuana use will 
effectively be approving a drug of unknown strength.

Even when the state-sanctioned supply materializes, the CMA notes, there 
will still be a dearth of reliable data on marijuana's long-term effects on 
the seriously ill, particularly if those people are also ingesting other 
drugs. Results from the first clinical tests, in Toronto and Montreal, will 
not be assessed until next year.

The new regulations, in sum, are the result of court rulings rather than 
medical evidence. But that doesn't mean those regulations are wrong. They 
came about because judge after judge, in court after court, was hearing the 
same consistent message. Men and women with agonizing illnesses stated 
that, yes, marijuana really does ease the pain.

Agreed, there are plenty of unknowns in this experiment, which is being 
watched closely from around the world. At the same time, severe pain is 
knowable. Ask anyone who has to live with it.

As for law enforcement, there is no disputing that the new landscape 
creates difficulties and may become more complicated still. Sooner or later 
- -- probably sooner -- a recreational pot-smoker will be found to have lied 
to his or her doctor, or in some other dishonest way tried to secure 
exemption from the criminal law. And when hundreds of kilos of state-grown 
pot start appearing, it will be remarkable if a portion of that is not 
diverted.

That's another good reason, we would argue, to take the next logical step 
in this decades-old debate. Decriminalize small-scale marijuana use 
entirely, and stop saddling pot-smokers with criminal records that last a 
lifetime. As with this current, limited level of toleration, opening such a 
door would create much uncertainty. But as with these new regulations, 
uncertainty is not necessarily the worst choice.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom