Pubdate: Tue, 07 Aug 2001
Source: Spokesman-Review (WA)
Copyright: 2001 The Spokesman-Review
Contact:  http://www.spokesmanreview.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/417
Source: Spokesman-Review (WA)
Author: Ellen Goodman, Boston Globe
Note: This column has been widely published - see 
http://www.mapinc.org/author/Ellen+Goodman

CANADIANS BRAVE ENOUGH TO GET IT RIGHT

No long since brain-fried, pot-smoking hippie could concoct a less
humane, rational and workable drug policy than our fearful leaders'
nonsense, Ellen Goodman laments.

BOSTON - And now, from our northern neighbors the allegedly staid
Canadians, a new antidote to our reefer madness.

The Canadian government has just increased the number of its people
who can use marijuana as medicine. As of this month, the terminally
ill and those with chronic diseases from cancer to AIDS to MS can turn
their back yards into their medicine cabinets.

With the approval of a doctor, they can either grow it or get it free
from the government, which is paying a company to nurture the plants
in an abandoned copper mine in Flin Flon, Manitoba.

Where does that leave us? U.S. citizens, who routinely cross the
border for cheap prescription drugs, won't be allowed access to the
Manitoba mother lode. But if Canadians can't export their medical
marijuana, it's time for us to import their policy.

The northern light on the subject comes in the wake of a Canadian
Supreme Court ruling that any patient suffering terminal or painful
illness should be allowed access to marijuana when a doctor says it
may help. Our own Supreme Court has moved in exactly the opposite
direction. In May, our Supremes ruled on narrow grounds that federal
drug law allows no exception for medical marijuana.

So the Canadians have implicitly recognized that marijuana has uses as
well as abuses. But our government supports the idea that marijuana
has no medicinal value worth the social risks. Our law not only
differs from Canada's, It's on a collision course with the policies in
nine states -- Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine,
Oregon, Nevada and Washington. More to the point, it's on a collision
course with patients looking for relief without looking for trouble.

Is anyone hallucinating?

Marijuana has a medical history that goes way back beyond the time
when the straight-laced Queen Victoria took it for menstrual cramps.
It was used widely in the West for pain and sleep, until aspirin and
barbiturates came along. It was demonized in the 1930s with "reefer
madness" propaganda and in the 1960s when Haight-Ashbury was covered
in a stoned haze.

Today, thousands of patients from paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould to
your neighbor's grandmother have reported on pot's value in relieving
the nausea of chemotherapy or improving the appetite of an AIDS
patient. Many doctors still wait for scientific proof, the
double-blind studies that have become the gold standard of research.
But no such studies existed when penicillin or even aspirin were accepted.

The few studies available show mixed results. A recent survey in a
British medical journal reported that marijuana was no better than
other available drugs for severe pain and somewhat better for nausea.
But these were marijuana-based medications, not smoked marijuana. The
patients still preferred the marijuana medications by a large margin.

Marijuana, like most drugs, has side effects, although worrying about
the effects of smoking on the lungs of a terminally ill patient seems
a bit absurd. One of the other side effects is what medical
researchers label "euphoria," or in street parlance, a "high." But as
Leonard Glantz, a Boston University professor of health law asks, "If
someone is terminally ill and they can eat and be euphoric, why is
that bad?"

Here we get to the heart of the matter: the drug war in which
marijuana has played a starring role, with 700,000 arrests in 1998.
There is a fear that if grandma can smoke it legally for her health,
granddaughter will smoke it to get high.

"We're seeing America's war on drugs being taken to an extreme that
begins to make no sense," says Glantz. Politicians are so afraid of
appearing soft on drugs they can't draw any distinctions.

Compare this to morphine. We don't allow morphine on the street but we
permit it in the doctor's arsenal for the treatment of pain. Imagine
the uproar if we were to outlaw morphine. There is no logic in
treating marijuana differently.

The Canadian system has its own critics: doctors who worry about being
gatekeepers and marijuana activists who think there are still too many
hurdles. But we are in a marijuana muddle.

The feds aren't likely to crack down on the terminally ill, nor are
law enforcers eager to rip joints out of the hands of AIDS patients.
Asa Hutchinson, the Bush pick to head the Drug Enforcement
Administration, said prosecuting medical marijuana dealers isn't "a
priority." Meanwhile, patients are using drug dealers as doctors. And
a treatment for suffering is a crime.

Is that a whiff of sanity from across the border? Or just a contact
high? 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake