Pubdate: Tue, 12 Mar 2002
Source: London Free Press (CN ON)
Copyright: 2002 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation.
Contact:  http://www.fyilondon.com/londonfreepress/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243
Author: Dennis Bueckert

CMA CHIEF RAISES CONCERN ABOUT MEDICAL USE OF POT

OTTAWA -- The president of the Canadian Medical Association says he fears 
the federal policy allowing medical marijuana use may also encourage 
recreational use, which he strongly opposes.

"We have to be very careful that it's not going to end up being thought 
this is a normal societal behaviour to smoke marijuana," Henry Haddad told 
a Senate committee yesterday.

Still, the association has long favoured decriminalizing simple possession 
and Haddad supplied a new argument.

"Each year thousands of teens and adults receive criminal records for 
possession," he said. "To the degree that having a criminal record limits 
or handicaps employment prospects, the impact on health status is profound."

Arguing against recreational use, Haddad said marijuana damages the lungs, 
can be addictive in about five per cent of users, is associated with lower 
school marks and may result in lost life opportunities.

Senator Pierre Claude Nolin, chairperson of the committee studying the use 
of illegal drugs, said a third of medical students have tried marijuana and 
asked Haddad if they had failed in their lives.

Medical practitioners have the same problems as the rest of the population, 
Haddad countered. He said decriminalization must be tied to a national drug 
strategy promoting awareness, prevention and treatment as well as research 
and monitoring.

He also argued demand for medical marijuana to help dying patients reflects 
the poor job Canada does providing palliative care.

Marijuana is never requested by dying patients in his home town of 
Sherbrooke, Que., he said

The reason, he suggested, is that staff at Sherbrooke provide good 
palliative care for terminal patients, something he believes is lacking in 
many communities.

"I ask (medical staff) 'has a single patient requested marijuana?' (They 
say) 'No.' Because the palliative care is done well. I think it's important 
to look at the whole context in which marijuana is offered."

"What we do badly in this country is care at the end of life, what is 
called compassionate care. Experts who know this area say it's done well in 
only 10 to 15 per cent of cases."
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart