Pubdate: Mon, 12 Dec 2016
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc.
Contact:  http://www.ottawacitizen.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326
Author: Jacquie Miller
Page: A1

MEDICAL MARIJUANA USE SOARS

The number of registered users has tripled during past year

The number of Canadians legally signed up to buy medical marijuana has
more than tripled in the last year.

The Health Canada statistics reflect an explosion in the number of
Canadians who are turning to marijuana to get relief from everything
from chronic pain to nausea from chemotherapy. By the end of
September, nearly 100,000 Canadians had obtained prescriptions and
registered to buy cannabis with one of the growers licensed by Health
Canada, such as the Tweed company in Smiths Falls.

That's a dramatic leap from the 30,537 people registered in September
2015.

The increase coincides with the switch in 2014 from a system dominated
by patients growing their own marijuana to the introduction of large
commercial grow ops that sell cannabis by mail.

A number of factors appear to be in play, according to cannabis
industry officials and doctors who are pioneering the use of
marijuana. There is a growing awareness among both patients and
doctors of the possible benefits of medical marijuana.

Clinics and information centres have sprung up to advise patients on
how to obtain cannabis legally, direct them to cannabis-friendly
doctors, and give advice on how to use it. The licensed marijuana
producers have also devoted resources to educating doctors and the
public.

Canopy Growth Corp., for instance, the parent company for Tweed, has
sent experts to doctors' offices across Canada to talk about the
benefits of cannabis, and has sponsored continuing education courses
for physicians.

The shift in attitudes has been marked, says Bruce Linton, Canopy's
CEO. When Tweed opened its plant in the old Hershey chocolate factory
in the spring of 2014, says Linton, the general attitude was, "We all
knew everything about cannabis - it was prohibited and bad, and
therefore we weren't supporting it."

As the use of cannabis becomes more mainstream, more doctors are
prescribing it, Linton says.

Dr. Sana-Ara Ahmed, who began using cannabis in her practice a year
ago, believes patients are driving the trend. "There may be a few more
doctors open to it. But I also believe it's the same doctors, seeing
more people. The direction is coming from the public. The direction is
not coming from the physicians."

People are sharing stories about cannabis, says Ahmed, an
anesthesiologist and chronic-pain specialist who advocates for
cannabis use.

"Patients are coming out and saying, 'Hey, mom, I smoked a joint,
maybe you should, too.' And mom (at first) says, 'No!' Then she'll go
back to her doctor, who says, 'I have no idea, but I hear there is a
specialist in town; go talk to them.' "

Most physicians don't learn anything about cannabis in medical school,
but many are anxious to educate themselves, said Alan Bell, a family
physician, clinical researcher and professor at the University of Toronto.

He recently gave a workshop to 200 doctors and is chair of a
continuing medical education program on the topic accredited by the
College of Family Physicians of Canada.

He agrees that more patients are asking about cannabis. "A patient
walks in, says, 'I have this pain. I've been using street marijuana;
it helps me,' " Bell says.

"The average physician is going to be at a loss. And as physicians we
are very reluctant to authorize the use of any medications without
adequate education. That's a real barrier.

"But it's an overcomeable barrier. We're in early days."

Cannabis industry consultant Eric Nash says he isn't surprised by the
increase in patients because demand is high. Before Health Canada
introduced the system of licensed producers, it estimated that 450,000
Canadians would be signed up for medical cannabis by 2024.

There are also as many as 29,000 Canadians who are allowed to grow
their own medical pot, either because they are covered by court
injunctions or because they have registered since August, when Health
Canada changed the rules again to allow home growing.

And many thousands more people are bypassing the legal system and
buying marijuana at illegal dispensaries across the country. One
dispensary umbrella group estimates that more than 300,000 Canadians
shop at them - a credible estimate, given that a federal survey in
2011 found that 420,000 Canadians said they used marijuana for medical
reasons.

"It has the potential of making (medical marijuana) look like snake
oil," Bell says.

"And I think that physicians must be cognizant of the fact that any
medication they are going to prescribe, they should really be
prescribing to therapeutic areas where there is evidence of benefit.
It's not sufficient if a patient comes in and says, 'I want this stuff
because I read on the Internet that it's good for this, that or the
other.' "

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[sidebar]

PATIENTS USING POT

455: The number of Canadians authorized to possess medical marijuana
in 2002, shortly after the federal government legalized it for the
first time.

37,151: The number of Canadians authorized to possess medical
marijuana by the end of 2013. Most patients grew their own.

12,409: The number of Canadians registered to buy marijuana from
licensed producers by Sept. 30, 2014, after the government banned home
growing. However, because of court injunctions, an estimated 28,000
people retained the right to possess or grow medical pot for
themselves or others.*

18,512: The number of Canadians registered to buy marijuana from
licensed producers by March 31, 2015. 30,537: The number of Canadians
registered to buy marijuana from licensed producers by Sept. 30, 2015.

56,649: The number of Canadians registered to buy marijuana from
licensed producers by March 31, 2016.

98,460: The number of Canadians registered to buy marijuana from
licensed producers by Sept. 30, 2016.

1,161: The number of patients who registered with Health Canada to
grow their own medical marijuana or have someone else do it for them
between August and the end of October 2016, after the government
changed the rules to once again allow home growing. *The court
injunction remains in place for those 28,000 people, as long as they
don't change their addresses or violate other terms of their old licences.
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MAP posted-by: Matt