Pubdate: Tue, 11 Jan 2011
Source: Miami Herald (FL)
Copyright: 2011 Miami Herald Media Co.
Contact:  http://www.miamiherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/262
Author: Fred Tasker
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/people/Irvin+Rosenfeld

Medical Marijuana

SOUTH FLORIDA MAN SMOKES MARIJUANA AT TAXPAYERS' EXPENSE

For Three Decades, a Federal Agency Has Supplied Irvin Rosenfeld With 
Marijuana to Control a Rare Disease. He Tells About It in a New Book.

On a recent chilly morning, Fort Lauderdale stockbroker Irvin 
Rosenfeld interrupted his client calls for a quick marijuana 
cigarette in the company parking lot. Then he went back to work.

The cigarette - perfectly legal for him - was one of about 120,000 
the federal government has provided to him at taxpayer expense for 
the past 29 years. He's one of only four people who remain in a 
now-closed "compassionate" drug program that at its peak provided 13 
patients across the country with daily doses of pot to help manage 
medical conditions.

For Rosenfeld, the 10 to 12 marijuana cigarettes he smokes every day 
help relieve a rare condition called Multiple Congenital 
Cartilaginous Exostosis, which causes painful tumors to grow from the 
ends of his bones.

He says the drug doesn't make him high or interfere with work, but it 
does ease his pain, make his joints more flexible and, for decades, 
has stopped the growth of tumors.

His new self-published book, My Medicine: How I Convinced the Federal 
Government to Provide my Marijuana and Helped Launch a National 
Movement, tells the story of his pot use, arguing that the federal 
government should be more aggressive in studying its medical uses. He 
praises the growing national push to legalize medical marijuana, as 
15 states have already done. The federal government still classifies 
it as a controlled substance with no legitimate medical uses.

"The more places it's legal, the more people will see it's not 
dangerous and stop some of the hysteria," says Rosenfeld, 58.

He says cannabis has helped him stay healthy. He plays softball and 
teaches a sailing class for the disabled in Coconut Grove.

"I've never missed a day of work due to illness," he says. "I'm a 
very healthy disabled person."

He tells his clients what he's doing and has the blessing of his 
firm, Newbridge Securities Corp. of Fort Lauderdale.

Dr. Charles Goldman, the Norfolk, Va., endocrinologist who wrote the 
original application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for 
Rosenfeld's medical marijuana, says he believes it helped reduce his 
pain and thus improve his mobility by acting on his central nervous system.

"He had been taking another potent, controlled narcotic, Dilaudid, in 
significant amounts for severe pain," Goldman said. "He was off 
Dilaudid entirely within six months."

The physician says he regularly checked Rosenfeld to be sure he could 
safely drive after smoking marijuana and determined the drug didn't 
make him high: "I don't know why."

Goldman didn't follow Rosenfeld long-term, so he doesn't know whether 
the marijuana prevented the progression of his bone tumors nor 
whether he might be risking lung cancer or other smoking-related 
diseases. Rosenfeld's other doctors declined to comment.

Medical marijuana is illegal in Florida, but patients still seek its 
perceived benefits. Dr. Nancy Klimas, professor of immunology at the 
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has prescribed 
Marinol, a legal, synthetic form of the Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) 
that gives marijuana its buzz, to ease nausea in chemotherapy 
patients, increase appetite in cancer patients and combat a wasting 
syndrome in end-stage AIDS patients.

"It works," she says.

Klimas said she knows of patients who prefer the real thing and go 
out of state to buy medical marijuana, but she warns: "Smoking 
anything is a bad idea. It causes lung problems."

For Rosenfeld, the drug has been a help. He was diagnosed at age 10 
with a hereditary, incurable disease in which growths form on the 
ends of the long bones and develop into caps of cartilage that reduce 
mobility and create pain.

"By 13, I was on Demerol for pain, and I couldn't walk on my own," 
the Portsmouth, Va., native says.

After Rosenfeld finished high school, his doctor suggested that a 
warmer climate might ease his pain. In 1971, he moved to South Miami 
and enrolled at Miami-Dade Community College.

Over the years, he treated his condition with prescription drugs 
including Percocet, Darvon, Dilaudid (synthetic morphine), 
Methaqualone and Valium.

His life changed when he smoked a marijuana cigarette at a party.

"Then I realized something astonishing: I had been sitting down for 
30 minutes!" he writes in his book. "This was the first time in five 
years I had sat still for longer than 10 minutes. Just then, the 
joint was passed to me. I looked at it and a light bulb went off: I 
wonder if marijuana relaxed my legs?"

After that, Rosenfeld says, he bought marijuana on the street. Then, 
in 1977, he heard Washington glaucoma patient Robert Randall give a 
speech. Randall had been arrested two years earlier for growing 
marijuana to treat his eye disease and won his case by using a 
"medical necessity" defense.

Randall's search for a legal way to get marijuana led him to the 
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), which had a contract with 
the University of Mississippi to grow pot for biomedical research. In 
1976, the government created an Investigational New Drug 
Compassionate Access Program and gave Randall's doctor access to 
marijuana from the university's farm.

Rosenfeld, who had been petitioning the FDA in vain, introduced 
himself to Randall and, with his help, got into the program, though 
he had to sign a release promising he wouldn't sue if he got lung cancer.

Every month since then, NIDA picks up the marijuana, sends it to a 
lab in Raleigh, N.C., to be made into cigarettes, packs 300 in a tin 
and ships them to a pharmacy in Miami where Rosenfeld picks them up. 
His cost: about $50 to cover handling.

But the program created an awkward situation for the federal 
government: NIDA was supplying marijuana to patients whose physicians 
had secured FDA permission at the same time the FDA and the Drug 
Enforcement Administration deemed marijuana illegal, without 
legitimate medical use.

In 1992, as HIV and AIDS patients began flooding the program with pot 
requests, President George H.W. Bush's administration closed it to 
new applicants.

Rosenfeld says that decision sparked campaigns on the state level to 
legalize medical marijuana. Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, 
Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, 
Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington have done so.

Nonetheless, marijuana possession remains a crime on the federal 
level and in many states, including Florida. U.S. Attorney General 
Eric Holder has said his office would not bring charges against 
people who use marijuana for medical reasons, but some federal 
prosecutors have said they will continue to prosecute anyway.

Conflicting laws and policies put employers in a difficult position, 
says Mark Levitt, an Orlando labor and employment lawyer. If, for 
example, a truck driver who smokes medical marijuana in a state that 
permits it injures someone in an accident, the employer could be 
liable, he says.

"What effect does it have on my ability to do my job?" Levitt asks. 
"It may depend on the job. If I'm driving, if I'm a police officer 
carrying a gun, it could be a problem. ... There's a potential 
conflict between the state's right to implement these laws and 
federal laws prohibiting drugs."

Support for legalizing medical marijuana in Florida appears limited. 
After two years of trying, Orlando-based People United for Medical 
Marijuana (PUFFM) has about 26,000 of the 677,000 signatures needed 
to put the issue on a ballot, says president Kim Russell. It has 
raised $34,000 of the $5 million she estimates would be needed to run 
a successful referendum campaign and is still seeking legislative sponsors.

On the federal level, meanwhile, NIDA has announced it will set aside 
$10 million in grants for institutions to study the effects of the 
movement to legalize medical pot.

Says Rosenfeld: "Our new president has pledged to bring about change. 
Could there be a more dramatic change than ending medical cannabis 
prohibition? Cannabis works as a medicine. I'm living proof."

[sidebar]

About the book

Irvin Rosenfeld's self-published book, My Medicine: How I Convinced 
the Federal Government to Provide my Marijuana and Helped Launch a 
National Movement, can be downloaded at mymedicinethebook.com or 
purchased for $19.95 at The Bookstore in The Grove or Books & Books 
in Coral Gables.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom