HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html McLellan
Pubdate: Tue, 27 Aug 2002
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2002 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Julia Necheff / Canadian Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

FEDS WILL SUPPLY MEDICINAL POT: MCLELLAN

EDMONTON (CP) - The federal government is not backing away from its plan to
supply patients with medical marijuana, Health Minister Anne McLellan said
today, bristling at earlier reports that the project has been shelved.

Her department hopes clinical trials on research-grade pot can begin at the
end of fall or in early winter, McLellan said, refuting suggestions she is
not keen to go ahead with the controversial plan to distribute marijuana for
medicinal purposes.

"In fact, far from shelving it, what we're doing is implementing the second
stage," McLellan said.

The first stage was to pass legislation last summer amending drug laws so
that people with certain medical conditions - such as multiple sclerosis,
HIV, cancer and Crohn's disease - could apply for special exemptions that
would allow them to use pot to relieve their symptoms.

"We have 855 of those people. More people continue to apply," McLellan said.

After a news report last week suggested the plan was being shelved, she said
some patients called the government and asked if their exemption was being
taken away.

"Of course not," McLellan added. "That process is in place. It will
continue."

The second stage is clinical trials. "Clinical trials are absolutely key,
especially for us in the Department of Health," McLellan said, repeating
what she told the Canadian Medical Association earlier this month.

The safety, efficacy and long-term effects of marijuana must be studied -
just like any drug, she said.

"If we let it go on the market and somebody died, you people would be the
first to say: `Oh look, there's the Department of Health not discharging its
responsibility in relation to protecting the safety and security of
Canadians.' "

Ottawa signed a $5.7-million, four-year contract in 2000 with
Saskatoon-based Prairie Plant Systems to grow marijuana for the government.
The pot is being grown deep in a former mine in Flin Flon, Man.

The government couldn't go ahead with an earlier crop because it wasn't
standardized and therefore not suitable to use in trials, she said.

"They've grown a second crop and we're testing it," McLellan said. "We
believe that we have overcome that problem. We have a standardized crop
which can be used."

However, a Health Canada official said in December the first crop was
quality-tested and was ready for distribution to patients and researchers.

A department spokesman said later Monday he couldn't account for the comment
made in December.

Prairie Plant Systems declined to comment, saying all information must come
from Health Canada.

Medical marijuana users say pot relieves their pain or gives them an
appetite or helps them sleep.

While speaking to the medical association, McLellan acknowledged feeling
uncomfortable with the idea of medicinal marijuana - about its safety,
effectiveness and the legal issues surrounding it. She told the doctors she
understood their concern over possible liability issues from prescribing
pot.

Some observers have suggested the government has backed away from medicinal
pot because, in part, it raises cross-border issues with the United States.
A noted pain specialist was quoted as saying he suspected Canada didn't want
to get ahead of the United States in this area

McLellan revealed to a Commons committee in the spring that American
drug-enforcement authorities wouldn't allow Health Canada access to pure,
research-quality marijuana seeds from U.S. National Institute of Drug Abuse.

An assistant deputy minister for Health Canada conceded at the time there
are people in the U.S. government opposed to research on the benefits of
marijuana.

The only option left to Health Canada was to grow seeds that been
confiscated by police. That produced a crop containing at least 185
different varieties.

Despite McLellan's assurances that the government remains committed to the
program, advocates for the medicinal use of marijuana aren't convinced that
just the timelines have changed.

The leader of the Marijuana Party of Canada, Marc-Boris St-Maurice accused
the government of backtracking.

"I'm starting to question the sincerity of the government," he said in an
interview from Montreal.

"They're so afraid of this issue that any way they can avoid it, they will,"
he said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Josh