Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jul 2003
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Copyright: 2003 Globe Newspaper Company
Contact:  http://www.boston.com/globe/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52
Author: Colin Nickerson, Globe Staff

CANADA SET TO DISPENSE MARIJUANA AS MEDICINE

MONTREAL -- Canada yesterday announced that it will start selling cheap pot 
to ill people seeking surcease from pain, becoming the first country in the 
world to supply so-called ''medical marijuana'' directly to patients.

Acting under court pressure, Health Canada -- the federal ministry of 
health -- said 1,650 baggies of marijuana are already packed and ready for 
sale to patients suffering from pain or nausea as the result of disease, 
chemotherapy used to treat cancer, AIDS, and other serious sicknesses. 
Marijuana also will be sold to people not expected to live more than a year.

The price is right, supplies should begin moving by next week, and the 
marijuana grown under government contract will be more reliably potent than 
anything peddled on the street, officials said.

''It's a splendid product, with a THC content of 10 percent,'' Cindy 
Cripps-Prawak, director of the federal office of Cannabis Medical Access, 
said in a conference call with reporters. Tetrahydrocannabinol is the 
psychoactive chemical that gives marijuana its punch; marijuana sold on the 
street has THC levels ranging from 3 percent to 16 percent, according to 
police.

Health Canada also said it will provide marijauna seeds to ''authorized 
persons'' wanting to sow and cultivate their own marijuana crop so long as 
the purpose of the harvest is medicinal.

Officials said 582 ill individuals have already been approved for the 
controversial program, although tens of thousands are expected to apply for 
the government marijuana, grown with artificial light in hydroponic vats 
1,200 feet underground in a disused section of a zinc mine in Flin Flon, 
Manitoba.

But marijuana activists called the announcement a ''smoke screen,'' and 
accused Ottawa of dragging its heels on the program to assist ill people 
whose symptoms might be alleviated by regular use. Marijuana should be 
distributed to hundreds of thousands of Canadians, not mere hundreds, said 
organizers of a protest yesterday outside Parliament in Ottawa.

''They have bungled the program and have done nothing to help 400,000 
Canadians who need access to medicinal marijuana,'' said Philippe Lucas, 
head of the group Canadians for Safe Access, which advocates easy access to 
marijuana for almost any patient wanting succor. ''This benign herb has a 
high safety profile and should be readily available.''

Canadian medical organizations, however, oppose the program because it puts 
physicians in the postion of being asked to prescribe a drug that has not 
undergone the sort of clinical trials required of ordinary pharmaceuticals.

''There is no scientific proof of either the effectiveness or safety [of 
marijuana] for short-or long-term use,'' said Dana Hanson, president of the 
Canadian Medical Association. ''There has been a glaring lack of 
consultation with physicians on this program -- yet physicians are being 
put in a position where patients may expect us to prescribe or dispense the 
substance.

''We're urging our doctors not to dispense [marijuana], since there is so 
much professional risk,'' he said.

Canada officially created its medical marijuana program in 2001, but it 
quickly became bogged down in bureaucratic delays. In January, an Ontario 
court gave Ottawa six months to start dispensing pot, ruling that federal 
drug laws made ''seriously ill, vulnerable people deal with the underworld 
to get medicine.''

Yesterday's announcement that the government will start selling medical 
marijuana comes as Prime Minister Jean Chretien pursues legislation that 
will decriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal 
use -- a proposal bitterly opposed by the Bush adminstration, which fears a 
flood of the drug into the United States.

The government price for medical marijuana will be equivalent to $106 an 
ounce -- less than half the average street price in Canada, according to 
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Marijuana seeds will be sold at $15 for 
a packet of 30.

Sale of medical marijuana -- grown by Saskatchewan-based Prairie Plant 
Systems Inc. -- will be limited to people suffering from chronic or 
catastrophic illnesses, including cancer, HIV or AIDS, arthritis, multiple 
sclerois, or mystery ailments that cause serious pain or nausea but cannot 
be readily diagnosed.

''This medical marijuana program promotes research on the medical value of 
marijuana while taking a compassionate approach to Canadians who suffer 
from serious medical conditions,'' said Health Minister Anne McLellan.

Although at least 12 states have approved the use of marijuana with a 
doctor's approval, the US Supreme Court in 2001 upheld a federal ban on 
medical marijuana.

Health Canada said yesterday that it is advising patients not to smoke the 
marijuana, but rather sprinkle it into food or suffuse it in tea. ''We 
believe that patients consume it in the safest possible way,'' said 
Cripps-Prawak. ''And the only way they can determine this is by discussing 
it with their physician.''
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart