Pubdate: Fri, 23 May 2014
Source: Chicago Tribune (IL)
Copyright: 2014 Chicago Tribune Company
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IuiAC7IZ
Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82
Author: Meredith Rodriguez
Page: 12

NAVY PIER TO HOST CANNABIS CONFERENCE IN JUNE

As the rules for a state medical marijuana pilot program are being 
finalized, a group of proponents announced Thursday that a cannabis 
conference will be held at Navy Pier in June.

A handful of people - including a doctor, a consultant and the vice 
president of a nonprofit - are trying to improve the drug's image and 
increase awareness of its medical benefits with the hope that the 
four-year pilot program expands in scope and duration.

"Don't be shy. It's OK to talk about marijuana - cannabis," said 
Amish Parikh, vice president of My Compassion, the Michigan-based 
nonprofit that is hosting the June 7-8 conference. "If you respect 
the law, the law will stay. We're trying to teach that as well."

The Illinois Compassionate Use of Medical Marijuana Pilot Program Act 
went into effect January. But the timing for when patients will 
actually start using the drug is uncertain, according to Melaney 
Arnold, spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

"We are hoping by the first part of next year, the program will be up 
and running," Arnold said.

The latest draft proposal of the rules governing medical marijuana 
was filed in April and is currently in a 45-day public comment period.

About two dozen people showed up to a public hearing in Springfield 
on Wednesday, Arnold said. A final approval by the legislative body 
will probably not be completed until around early August, at which 
point Illinois residents will be able to begin applying to use the drug.

Supporters like Parikh hope that patients will be able to collect 
from the 60 statewide retail stores allowed under the law by January.

The pilot program also allows for 21 cultivation centers in Illinois. 
Under the act, doctors would be able to prescribe marijuana for about 
40 medical conditions, Arnold said.

The Illinois law is more restrictive than in other states where the 
drug is legalized, according to Patty Schuler, a certified nurse and 
a mother who is eager to replace some of the 45 synthetic medications 
that she said her daughter with cerebral palsy and epilepsy uses.

"Illinois does not want to follow the lead of California because 
California has the reputation that it's free - anybody can get a 
card, become a patient and go to the next corner to buy cannabis," 
Schuler said. "It wants to stay within the boundaries of the law and 
wants to make sure that doctors are actually doing the work, making 
recommendations for patients and following up with that patient."

Since the law passed in Illinois, Schuler said she has become a 
consultant who wants to educate potential patients and hopes that the 
40 medical conditions that can be treated with cannabis under the 
current pilot program expands to the more than 600 medical conditions 
she believes the drug can treat.

"I am going to make sure it grows," Schuler said of the pilot program.

People can petition to add their medical conditions to the list, and 
those petitions will be considered twice per year in January and 
July, Arnold added.

Dr. Hernon Toney, a physician at Christ Medical Center, said there is 
also a need for education in the medical field. He believes many of 
the benefits of cannabis have been suppressed by pharmaceutical 
companies, but the medical community needs to embrace this new law.

"I think a lot of times the medical community shies away from it when 
you say ' medicinal marijuana.' They say, 'Oh, you're going to smoke 
it?' No, that's not it," Toney said. "But I know the medical benefits of it."
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