Pubdate: Sat, 17 Sep 2005
Source: CounterPunch (US Web)
Column: Pot Shots
Copyright: 2005 CounterPunch
Contact:  http://www.counterpunch.org/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3785
Author: Fred Gardner, http://www.mapinc.org/author/Fred+Gardner
Cited: Oregon Medical Marijuana Act http://www.omma1998.org/
Related: Oregon Medical Marijuana Program 
http://www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/ommp/index.shtml
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Rick+Bayer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)

THE MILLWORKER'S ARGUMENT

The Oregon Supreme Court has agreed to review Washburn v. Columbia 
Forest Products, Inc., a case that will clarify how much protection 
the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act (OMMA) affords workers.

Millworker Robert Washburn of Klamath Falls got a card through the 
state program in 1999 after a doctor approved his marijuana use for 
pain-related insomnia. Washburn never showed signs of impairment on 
the job, but was fired in 2001 after his urine tested positive for 
marijuana metabolites. Washburn sued for reinstatement and back pay. 
A Multnomah County Circuit Court judge ruled against him, citing a 
clause in OMMA releasing employers from any obligation to accommodate 
"use of medical marijuana in any workplace."

Washburn appealed, arguing that he didn't use marijuana at the mill 
("in" his workplace) but only at home, before going to bed. In 
January of this year the Court of Appeals ruled for Washburn. 
Columbia Forest Products then asked the state supreme court to review 
the ruling.

They will hear arguments November 7.

"The bottom-line question should be impairment," says Rick Bayer, 
M.D. a Lake Oswego internist who was chief petitioner for the OMMA in 
'98 and has worked ever since for its implementation. The prospect of 
Washburn prevailing, says Bayer, inspired an employers' consortium to 
try to undermine OMMA by a bill, HB2693, confirming their "right" to 
fire workers who use marijuana whether on or off the job. It passed 
the Republican-controlled House, then failed in a Democrat-controlled 
Senate committee. "This may be a temporary reprieve," says Bayer, who 
expects the employers to reintroduce the measure.

What follows is Bayer's July 10 testimony opposing HB2693:

- -----

Registration in the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program should never be 
sole cause for termination of employment. Nor should inactive 
metabolites in the body for a registered patient be sole cause for 
termination. An important part of the law is "marijuana should be 
treated like other medicines." This means Oregonians voted to make 
medical marijuana treated like medical morphine, medical synthetic 
THC, or Food and Drug Administration-approved medicines.

The psychoactive effects of both synthetic THC (Marinol) and herbal 
marijuana are due primarily to THC. The timing issues about how a 
drug behaves in the body are called pharmacokinetics and are mostly 
dependent on the method of administering the drug. For example, an 
inhaled medicine typically works faster but the effects usually do 
not last as long as a medicine taken by mouth that must be absorbed 
by the digestive tract.

Inhaling cannabis through smoking or vaporizing cannabis bypasses the 
digestive tract.

In A Primer of Drug Action, pharmacologist Robert Julian, MD, PhD, 
states, "absorption of inhaled drugs is rapid and complete.

The onset of behavioral effects of THC in smoked marijuana occurs 
almost immediately after smoking begins and corresponds with the 
rapid attainment of peak concentrations in plasma.

Unless more is smoked, the effects seldom last longer than 3 to 4 hours."

In the Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics, Franjo Grotenhermen, MD 
wrote "Pulmonary [lung] assimilation of inhaled THC causes a maximum 
plasma concentration within minutes, while psychotropic effects [the 
"high"] start within seconds to a few minutes, reach a maximum after 
15 to 30 minutes, and taper off within 2 or 3 hours." ... In summary, 
this peer-reviewed scientific article informs us that the impairment 
resolves when plasma THC levels return to low-levels at 3 hours and 
baseline around 4 hours after smoking marijuana.

Since THC acts identically whether synthetic or herbal, we should 
look at the warnings section of the US Food and Drug Administration 
(FDA)-approved Marinol (synthetic THC): "WARNINGS: Patients receiving 
treatment with Marinol should be specifically warned not to drive, 
operate machinery, or engage in any hazardous activity until it is 
established that they are able to tolerate the drug and perform such 
task safely." This is sound advice.

In the above studies, impairment from smoked cannabis or marijuana 
resolves within four hours.

Since synthetic THC and herbal THC are identical once inside the 
body, there is no scientific rationale for discrimination against 
those who prefer medical THC from an herbal rather than a synthetic source.

The Marinol package insert warnings should be heeded regardless of 
whether a person uses synthetic FDA-approved THC (as in Marinol) or 
herbal THC (as in marijuana or cannabis).

When a clinician monitors drug therapy, s/he educates a patient 
through a careful explanation of the procedure (method of use and 
expected results), alternative therapies, and risks involved in using 
or not using the medicine.

There are many medicines - prescription or nonprescription - that 
cause drowsiness or impairment. These include medicine for blood 
pressure, diabetes, arthritis, respiratory infection, allergies, mood 
stabilization, and pain. Physicians and patients use good 
communication to lessen risks of adverse drug reactions.

It is important to avoid impairment when driving, operating 
machinery, or engaging in any hazardous activity whether in the 
workplace or not. Monitoring by family, friends, peers, and 
co-workers for anyone's impairment can improve safety.

One reason that direct observation of impairment is important is that 
impairment can be caused by health problems not related to 
prescription medicines. Things like non-prescription over-the-counter 
medicines, acute influenza, or a family emergency resulting in lost 
sleep can cause impairment. This means good communication between 
employees and employer can lessen risk of impairment at work.

Urine drug testing to monitor therapy is not routinely used in 
clinical medicine.

It is helpful in toxicology or poisoning cases when a doctor is 
uncertain what drugs are in the body. Urine tests are also used in 
medical-legal settings.

The standard urine test for "marijuana" does not test for the "parent 
drug" THC, but tests for an inactive non-psychoactive "metabolite" or 
breakdown product of THC. Inactive breakdown products in a standard 
"urine marijuana test" can remain positive for weeks to months after 
consuming cannabis even when there is no impairment. The US 
Department of Transportation commented about urine drug testing 
stating that, "while a positive urine test is solid proof of drug use 
within the last few days, it cannot be used by itself to prove 
behavioral impairment during a focal event." In other words, urine 
drug testing does not prove impairment - it only proves recent use.

Between 1976 and 1991, there were at least four flight-simulator 
studies published according to a Library of Medicine search.

One showed impairment for at least 2 hours that resolved by 4 to 6 
hours. Three others by a different research team showed conflicting 
results. Two of those three show some impairment at 24 hours while 
one of the three studies showed abnormal flight simulator results 
only at 4 hours but none at 8 or 24 hours.

Another unpublished study by the same group failed to find impairment 
bringing the total studies to five. These mixed results create confusion.

Since blood levels of THC are near baseline 4 hours after smoking 
cannabis and impairment beyond 4 hours cannot be consistently 
demonstrated, the researchers actually call this flight simulator 
result a "hangover effect" rather than intoxication. According to Dr. 
Leirer, the purported hangover effect is "very marginal" and is only 
detected in tests of "very complex human/machine performance". 
Comparable, subtle effects are reported at very low blood alcohol 
levels of 0.025%, which is even under the .04% level allowed in 
commercial motor vehicle drivers.

Possibly because of confusion surrounding flight simulator data, 
other researchers study actual motor vehicle accidents.

In 2002, authors Gregory Chesher and Marie Longo concluded, "At the 
present time, the evidence to suggest an involvement of cannabis in 
road crashes is scientifically unproven." However as they note, some 
of this may be because of evolving science.

As mentioned above, testing for inactive urine metabolites does not 
test for impairment. Recent studies continue to show that "no 
increased risk for road trauma was found for drivers exposed to cannabis."

But there is also an effort to base impairment on measuring the 
"parent drug" responsible for impairment, namely THC. Dr. Olaf 
Drummer, measured THC levels in fatal crashes in Australia and 
noticed an association between high THC levels and risk of traffic 
fatality even in the absence of other drugs.

Based on forensic evidence he determines whether a driver is 
"culpable" or responsible for the fatal accident and correlates it to 
blood THC levels.

Drummer and colleagues conclude, "Recent use of cannabis may increase 
crash risk, whereas past use of cannabis does not." Dr. Franjo 
Grotenhermen's review of Dr. Drummer's work adds, "While drivers with 
low concentrations [of THC] in their blood had a lower probability of 
causing a traffic accident than drug free drivers, higher THC 
concentrations were associated with a considerably higher culpability ratio."

It remains unclear how to define the gray area about what is "recent" 
and what is "past" use of cannabis even if one supports using parent 
drug blood THC levels as a marker for impairment. This is because the 
THC level below which there is no impairment, varies dramatically 
among individuals. Plus, the actual numbers of persons who have only 
THC in the blood and are involved in accidents is low and studies 
still lack adequate statistical significance to draw scientifically 
firm conclusions. Those concerned about legislation suggest that 
since no culpability appears to exist below blood levels of 10 
nanograms per milliliter (ng/ml), that any proposed cutoffs be above 
10 ng/ml of THC. A study using coordination testing showed inevitable 
failure on field sobriety testing if blood THC levels were 25-30 
ng/ml but many failed testing at 90 and 150 minutes after smoking 
even though plasma concentrations were rather low.

The researchers had the foresight to conclude that "establishing a 
clear relation between THC plasma concentrations and clinical 
impairment will be much more difficult than for alcohol." This is 
primarily because alcohol and THC are chemically different and are 
metabolized differently inside the body. With passage of medical 
marijuana laws, we need additional research to show if there is a 
correlation between clinical impairment and blood THC levels.

Daily cannabis users (like patients) can have levels as high as 6 to 
10 ng/ml without clinical impairment even after 24 or more hours of 
abstinence. While the science evolves, most experts think it remains 
premature to make firm conclusions about the proper cutoff levels 
using blood THC for "Driving Under the Influence" suspicion.

Proper clinical discussion of medical marijuana therapy and necessary 
clinical observation for impairment remain the primary methods of 
monitoring for possible adverse reactions at this time.

In summary, there is no consistent scientific evidence showing any 
impairment beyond four hours from smoking marijuana and no scientific 
evidence of any increased risk of motor vehicle accidents beyond four 
hours after smoking marijuana.

As a medical cannabis expert, I do not condone any medical marijuana 
use of cannabis at work. But, private employer-employee agreements to 
abstain within 4 or 8 hours prior to work seem a reasonable type of 
compromise. This still preserves safety, and would be consistent with 
medical treatment plans using other medicines that may impair.

Registration in the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program should never be 
sole cause for termination of employment. Medical use of marijuana 
within Oregon law should be treated like medical Marinol, medical 
morphine, and other medications both in and out of the workplace.

It is discriminatory to fire an unimpaired worker whose only cause 
for firing is registration with the Oregon Department of Human 
Services Oregon Medical Marijuana Program. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake