Pubdate: Wed, 14 Dec 2011
Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
Copyright: 2011 The Edmonton Journal
Contact: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html
Website: http://www.edmontonjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134

MARIJUANA AS MEDICINE A COMPLEX ISSUE

Few of us would take medical marijuana away from the sufferers we read 
about in a special report on the treatment in The Journal and Ottawa 
Citizen - like the woman with multiple sclerosis and the former 
soldier with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Still, medical marijuana remains a problem for physicians and 
governments. It is both an illegal street drug and a home remedy for a 
variety of health problems, and the line between those two uses is not 
always clear. As long as marijuana is an illegal high, there is a 
possibility people will try to scam the system to get their weed.

As we learned in the special report, the number of applications for 
medical marijuana made by people saying they have severe arthritis has 
jumped 2,400 per cent in a two-year period. Severe arthritis is a 
category that requires the OK of only one physician - unlike people 
with hepatitis or ulcerative colitis, who must first get the approval 
of a specialist. That appears to be a popular loophole. There are 
others, and abuse is inevitable in a system that has the drug being 
grown by individuals and small operators, not manufactured by large 
pharmaceutical companies. That democratic nature of marijuana is both 
its blessing and curse.

It's fascinating to hear the ways that patients themselves devise to 
take the drug - puffers, capsules, tea, brownies, even a topical 
cream. If the drug wasn't illegal, we could let people grow their own 
and medicate themselves as they choose, without interference from 
physicians or the government.

The reality is, though, that Canada cannot legalize marijuana unless 
the United States follows suit. We share a long border with the 
world's greatest power and if we want to preserve our easy access 
across that border, our illegal drug laws need to be similar to those 
in the U.S. That means pot is going to stay illegal for awhile, so its 
medical use needs to be controlled by someone.

Currently, physicians and Health Canada jointly approve patients for 
medical marijuana. Under proposals being considered by Health Canada, 
the federal involvement would end and physicians alone would be able 
to grant approval. Such a move would put the medical profession in a 
difficult position as most physicians remain uneasy about approving 
medical marijuana for their patients. The uses and efficacy of medical 
marijuana have simply not been scientifically tested and defined 
enough to confirm it as a legitimate treatment.

Indeed, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta states 
flatly: "The college does not recommend physicians prescribe medical 
marijuana to patients."

The scientific studies that physicians typically rely on might be a 
long time coming in this case. Big drug companies appear disinterested 
in marijuana, possibly because it holds little promise of 
profitability. And the federal government terminated a medical 
marijuana research project in 2006, which is a pity given the need for 
better understanding of what marijuana can do for various ailments.

Health Canada might also replace the plethora of smallscale growers of 
medical marijuana with licensed commercial producers. Currently, 
12,000 people across the country are licensed to grow medical 
marijuana. That proliferation has created problems for municipal 
governments that find grow-ops in residential neighbourhoods causing 
fire hazards and other safety concerns. Replacing all those growers 
with fewer, larger commercial operators seems likely to reduce safety 
concerns and improve control over the delivery of the marijuana to 
approved patients.

What the federal government shouldn't lose sight of is that this drug 
works for many people who suffer terrible pain and misery from cancer 
and other debilitating conditions. While Ottawa attempts to tighten 
the rules to prevent illegal uses, it should also take responsibility 
for making sure people who need this drug can still get it legally. 
Non-medicinal marijuana is illegal, but it's not cocaine or heroin. 
Let's work on getting marijuana to those who use it for legitimate 
medical reasons.
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MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.