Pubdate: Mon, 30 Aug 1999 Date: 08/30/1999 Source: San Francisco Examiner (CA) Author: H. Gordon Ainsleigh During the recent controversies over medical marijuana prosecutions in Placer County, I have been surprised by the absence of depression from the list of serious diseases that marijuana helps. Several of my chiropractic patients tell me that antidepressant prescription drugs don't work nearly as well as marijuana, but these people still try to get by on the pharmaceuticals as much as possible because of their fear of getting arrested in herbally obsessed Placer County. A typical comment is, "Prozac, Paxil and Zoloft take five weeks to work and don't work very well. Marijuana takes five minutes to work and stops depression in its tracks." Like so many chiropractors, I'm not in favor of medicating only the few most awful, life-threatening depressions. Chiropractors view pain, emotional or physical, as a friend telling us what needs to be changed and motivating us to get moving. Drugs just cover up the problem, in this case a depressing life that needs changing. However, for those who don't or can't take the time, get to a counselor, spend the money, do the effort, feel the pain and change what must be changed, or for those who have just drawn some really bad cards in life's game of chance, depression can be a life-threatening illness. Those people should have available the cheapest and most effective antidepressant medication there is. For many, that is clearly marijuana. The Hindus didn't call it "poor-man's paradise" for nothing. H. Gordon Ainsleigh, Meadow Vista