Pubdate: Mon, 01 Oct 2012
Source: Kansas City Star (MO)
Copyright: 2012 The Kansas City Star
Contact:  http://www.kansascity.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/221
Author: James A. Fussel

ISSUE OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA STILL BURNS

More states will consider legalizing the drug for treatment, but many 
people oppose it and the federal government still outlaws it.

Every two weeks Greg T. of Independence drives downtown to the city's 
underbelly to buy an eighth of an ounce of pot.

He's smoked marijuana for 37 years. He says it's the only thing that 
eases the agony of his Crohn's disease, an autoimmune disorder that 
attacks his intestinal tract.

A devout Christian and former Boy Scout, the 54-year-old father of 
two loves his country. But for decades, he said, that country has 
forced him to become a criminal to survive.

Greg, who asked that his last name not be used because he fears 
prosecution, is one of many patients who support movements in 
Missouri and Kansas to legalize medical marijuana.

A groundswell has been building nationwide for similar efforts, even 
as the federal government vigorously prosecutes buyers and 
state-regulated sellers.

* Seventeen states and the District of Columbia have legalized 
medical marijuana - six of them in the last five years.

* In November, voters in Arkansas and Massachusetts will decide 
whether to legalize it.

* Also next month, Colorado, Oregon and Washington will vote on 
expanding legalization for recreational use as well.

* Lawmakers in 15 more states, including Missouri and Kansas, are 
expected to introduce medical marijuana legislation in 2013 .

On Saturday, about 100 Kansas activists rallied in support of medical 
marijuana at the state Capitol in Topeka. Some holding signs 
("Patients should not be prisoners") and wearing T-shirts emblazoned 
with the marijuana leaf, they listened to speakers including a doctor 
and several patients.

"If you are over 18 years old it is your responsibility to go sign up 
and try to run for those offices ... and do something about this, 
now!" said Esau Freeman, a Wichita painter and new president of the 
Kansas Medical Cannabis Network - to rousing ovations.

But state laws only mean so much. With medical marijuana legal in 
some states, but still federally illegal, the country is in a war 
with itself. Federal officials have stepped up raids on medical 
marijuana dispensaries in California, Colorado and Montana, leaving a 
cloudy future for the state of state-sanctioned pot.

Opponents of medical marijuana call the drug addictive and dangerous 
and say legalizing it for medical use would create more desire for 
full legalization. Medical legalization also would flout Food and 
Drug Administration requirements to test drugs for safety and 
efficacy before approval.

"The process is bypassing the FDA (and) is creating medicine by 
popular vote, which we would not want under any other circumstances," 
said Eric Voth, a Topeka internist and chairman of the Institute on 
Global Drug Policy, an alliance of physicans, scientists, attorneys 
and drug specialists advocating public policies that curtail illicit 
drugs and alcohol.

"And with marijuana you are talking about an impure substance that is 
unpredictable. There is such a wide variance of the strength of the 
marijuana on the market there is no way for patients to predict what 
they're getting as (they can) with pharmaceutical-grade medication."

Former Senate Republican majority leader Bill Frist, a physician, is 
an outspoken opponent of medical marijuana.

"Although I understand many believe marijuana is the most effective 
drug in combating their medical ailments," he told the website 
ProCon.org, "I would caution against this assumption due to the lack 
of consistent, repeatable scientific data available to prove 
marijuana's medical benefits. ... I believe marijuana is a dangerous 
drug and that there are less dangerous medicines offering the same 
relief from pain and other medical symptoms."

Don't tell that to David Mulford of Hutchinson. Traditional medicines 
don't work for him.

Marijuana does.

"It's absolutely unconscionable that they won't listen to what we 
have to say," he said.

Spasms cause agonizing contractions in Mulford's limbs, chest and 
neck. Doctors do not know what's wrong with him. In 2001 contractions 
in his chest grew so bad his aorta failed. A surgeon transplanted a 
new aorta but told him he had less than two years to live.

That's when Mulford turned to Mary Jane to calm the spasms.

"It saved my life," he said. "To say marijuana is unsafe and doesn't 
have a medicinal use is the single biggest lie ever perpetrated 
against our citizens."

Greg T., who also uses marijuana to stop the pain of diabetic 
neuropathy, is allergic to the steroids and other drugs doctors have 
given him. They caused hallucinations and 'roid rage.

Marijuana "has been a godsend for me," he said. It stops severe pain, 
vomiting and diarrhea, and helps him keep food down so he can gain 
weight. "I don't want to break the law. But when you're sick, you'll 
do anything you have to do."

Burdett Loomis, political science professor at the University of 
Kansas, doesn't give medical marijuana bills much of a chance to 
become law in conservative Kansas or Missouri. Then again ...

"Look at what happened with gay rights laws," he said. "At one point 
you wouldn't have given them a chance to pass either (in other 
states). And state lotteries? We didn't used to have them; now 
they're all over."

The Kansas House actually passed a medical marijuana bill in 1995, 
only to see it fail in the Senate.

"People know patients whose symptoms have been eased by marijuana," 
Loomis said. "Plus it's potentially a huge revenue source. So if some 
states legalized it, taxed it and got substantial revenues and the 
earth didn't end, then - who knows?"

At the same time much has changed on the medical front. Scientists 
around the world have stepped up research after recent findings 
showing the cannabinoids in marijuana can kill cells in certain 
cancerous tumors.

The California Medical Association, representing more than 35,000 
doctors, not only has voiced support for medical marijuana but called 
for full legalization of cannabis itself. And after more than 70 
years, the American Medical Association has reversed its stance on 
marijuana and urged the government to review its classification of the drug.

Currently marijuana is a Schedule 1 drug, the same as heroin and PCP, 
considered to have "no accepted medical use."

Medical marijuana supporters such as Jon Hauxwell, a retired 
physician from Hays, Kan., call that provably untrue.

"Neuropathic pain, common in diabetes, comes from damaged nerves," he 
said. "The things we have don't work well on it. But we have a 
gold-standard FDA-approved study in California that shows that 
cannabis is effective for neuropathic pain."

Even former U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders says marijuana has 
medical value.

"The evidence is overwhelming that marijuana can relieve certain 
types of pain, nausea, vomiting and other symptoms caused by such 
illnesses as multiple sclerosis, cancer, AIDS - or by the harsh drugs 
sometimes used to treat them," she told the Providence (R.I.) 
Journal. "And it can do so with remarkable safety."

Hauxwell, who spoke at Saturday's rally in Topeka, dismisses 
arguments about addiction or dangers.

"The National Institute on Drug Abuse says of those who try cannabis 
about 9 percent eventually become dependent," he said. "The figure 
for alcohol is 15 percent; cigarettes 32 percent. And if you compare 
cannabis to meth, meth is more toxic and more prone to abuse. But 
it's actually legal to prescribe meth. There's nothing consistent 
about the government's approach to this."

He said legislators have told him that medical marijuana is a 
political hot potato they're afraid to touch for fear of being 
labeled "soft on drugs."

While one of the active components in marijuana has been purified and 
synthesized into a legal pill called Marinol, medical marijuana 
advocates say it's not as effective as the natural plant, which has 
more than 400 compounds.

Voth said too much is still unknown about marijuana to legalize it as 
a drug. He cited a recent study that showed a deterioration in 
cognitive function from the teens to the 30s in the brains of regular 
marijuana users. He also said a study showed that fatal car accidents 
have doubled in California since marijuana dispensaries opened in the 
early 2000s.

On the other hand, he said, he's not unreasonable. He is in favor of 
more research on the possible medical benefits of the cannabinoids in 
marijuana. Still, he would never legalize weed as a drug doctors 
could prescribe.

Former Kansas attorney general Robert Stephan of Overland Park would.

"I get very emotional about this," said Stephan, who, at 79, has 
survived multiple cancers and talked to patients who have used 
marijuana to ease their pain and nausea.

"It's very upsetting. When you know people are suffering needlessly, 
and we can't get the federal government to take a realistic look at 
this, it just doesn't make any sense. It's ridiculous."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom