Dying woman...denied Medical Marijuana

by Rabbit 12 Replies latest social current

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070314/ap_on_he_me/medical_marijuana_2;_ylt=AkZzyXN31hAyM7.xvb7A0txa24cA

    The above link will take you to the California woman's story.

    Discuss ?

    http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/03/01/marijuana_as_wonder_drug/

    Marijuana as wonder drug

    By Lester Grinspoon | March 1, 2007

    A NEW STUDY in the journal Neurology is being hailed as unassailable proof that marijuana is a valuable medicine. It is a sad commentary on the state of modern medicine -- and US drug policy -- that we still need "proof" of something that medicine has known for 5,000 years.

    The study, from the University of California at San Francisco, found smoked marijuana to be effective at relieving the extreme pain of a debilitating condition known as peripheral neuropathy. It was a study of HIV patients, but a similar type of pain caused by damage to nerves afflicts people with many other illnesses including diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Neuropathic pain is notoriously resistant to treatment with conventional pain drugs. Even powerful and addictive narcotics like morphine and OxyContin often provide little relief. This study leaves no doubt that marijuana can safely ease this type of pain.

    As all marijuana research in the United States must be, the new study was conducted with government-supplied marijuana of notoriously poor quality. So it probably underestimated the potential benefit.

    This is all good news, but it should not be news at all. In the 40-odd years I have been studying the medicinal uses of marijuana, I have learned that the recorded history of this medicine goes back to ancient times and that in the 19th century it became a well-established Western medicine whose versatility and safety were unquestioned. From 1840 to 1900, American and European medical journals published over 100 papers on the therapeutic uses of marijuana, also known as cannabis.

    Of course, our knowledge has advanced greatly over the years. Scientists have identified over 60 unique constituents in marijuana, called cannabinoids, and we have learned much about how they work. We have also learned that our own bodies produce similar chemicals, called endocannabinoids.

    The mountain of accumulated anecdotal evidence that pointed the way to the present and other clinical studies also strongly suggests there are a number of other devastating disorders and symptoms for which marijuana has been used for centuries; they deserve the same kind of careful, methodologically sound research. While few such studies have so far been completed, all have lent weight to what medicine already knew but had largely forgotten or ignored: Marijuana is effective at relieving nausea and vomiting, spasticity, appetite loss, certain types of pain, and other debilitating symptoms. And it is extraordinarily safe -- safer than most medicines prescribed every day. If marijuana were a new discovery rather than a well-known substance carrying cultural and political baggage, it would be hailed as a wonder drug.

    The pharmaceutical industry is scrambling to isolate cannabinoids and synthesize analogs, and to package them in non-smokable forms. In time, companies will almost certainly come up with products and delivery systems that are more useful and less expensive than herbal marijuana. However, the analogs they have produced so far are more expensive than herbal marijuana, and none has shown any improvement over the plant nature gave us to take orally or to smoke.

    We live in an antismoking environment. But as a method of delivering certain medicinal compounds, smoking marijuana has some real advantages: The effect is almost instantaneous, allowing the patient, who after all is the best judge, to fine-tune his or her dose to get the needed relief without intoxication. Smoked marijuana has never been demonstrated to have serious pulmonary consequences, but in any case the technology to inhale these cannabinoids without smoking marijuana already exists as vaporizers that allow for smoke-free inhalation.

    Hopefully the UCSF study will add to the pressure on the US government to rethink its irrational ban on the medicinal use of marijuana -- and its destructive attacks on patients and caregivers in states that have chosen to allow such use. Rather than admit they have been mistaken all these years, federal officials can cite "important new data" and start revamping outdated and destructive policies. The new Congress could go far in establishing its bona fides as both reasonable and compassionate by immediately moving on this issue.

    Such legislation would bring much-needed relief to millions of Americans suffering from cancer, AIDS, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and other debilitating illnesses.

    Lester Grinspoon, an emeritus professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, is the coauthor of "Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine."

    © Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

  • sammielee24
    sammielee24

    People should have a choice of using mariquana for pain relief if they so choose. They should be able to grow their own for their own benefit in those cases as well - not only would it save them money because the pharmaceutical companies wouldn't have their hands on it, but it would provide them relief when they needed it and not when a doctor or government tells them they can have it. Of course, we would hear some people screaming that its the gateway to heroin - but when you consider that there are about 10 million kids - and about 2 million of those under the age of 3 in the USA on Prozac; there are something like 8 million on Ritalin; there are millions of people on anti- depressants; millions on pain killers now and toss in a few millions more on some sort of drug for something - I think we already have the gateway..and we've made it legal. We've been hearing about clinical trials and government involvement in this issue for years and it's pathetic. The plant should be considered an herb...make it legal to grow and use. I know people who have had terminal cancer and used it quite successfully. It brought them tremendous pain relief and improved their appetite - overall, it gave them some control and a better quality of life until they died. sammieswife.

  • Mystla
    Mystla

    Sammieswife... the billions spent on pharmaceuticals is why pot isn't federaly legalised for medicinal use. There are way to many "legal" drugs that could be replaced by one inexpensive drug. Pharmaceutical companys would lose sooo much money if pot was made legal. Medicine is a big buisness.. our government caters to big buisnesses..

    My husband has used pot for his chronic pain. It is the only thing that has helped.. the narcotics he was getting from his Dr. didn't help a bit. In fact vicodin turned him into an asshole without helping his pain (that was fun) If he gets caught using pot he could lose his va disability income. So he has to choose between that risk and pain relief.

    Many countries are researching the benefits of marijuana, maybe if enough studies prove it's benefits the US will pay attention, but it's going to take time, which people who are suffering now don't have.

    This study done in CA was discounted by the US gov. as being inconclusive and there is a nonprofit group suing over the comments that were made. I don't remember all the details, sorry.

    Misty

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    human beings should be allowed to ingest whatever substances they like. to say that people should not be allowed to amounts to a value based moral call on other people's lives.

    humans have been partaking of the herb for millenia. some victorian purists, who happen to run the most powerful empire in the world, prefer booze over marijuana, and other mind expanding & medicinal subtances. i would be interested to know how many jerks who work for the DEA go home at night, drink too much scotch, beat their wives, and pass out?

    to outlaw a plant, or chemicals that occur naturally on earth, is the height of h.sap hubris. another example of left over ideas from a dark age. which means............................................................. that we're still living in a dark age.

    marijuana is technically a psychedelic substance. psychedelic substances expand people's consciousnesses. THAT is the real issue here. medicinal use of m.indica just happens to be the the route that the plant will gain "legality" via. but the thing is this: if one psychedelic is "legalized", then why not the others? and if large numbers of the populace begin meditating on the nature of their existence in the cosmos because of psychedelic drugs, then perhaps you see the battle that the status quo establishment is up against regarding this.

    in canada, the chunk of dirt i live on, the DEA are routinely performing ops here to bust canadian citizens, and try them in the states. seed bank owners, growers, etc etc. the canadian government allows it all laying down like the b*tch she is because of the "war on terror". people helping sick people get medicine that doesn't come from some east coast pharm are now terrorists. the situation in the states is even worse.

    some people may think that as time passes, the US gov becomes more liberal regarding marijuana. not so. there were almost 800,000 arrests in relation to marijuana in 2005, up almost 400,000 from 1980.

    from http://www.drugwarfacts.org/marijuan.txt

    Marijuana 1. In 2005, 42.6 percent of the 1,846,351 total arrests for drug abuse violations in the US were for marijuana -- a total of 786,545. Of those, 696,074 people were arrested for possession alone. By contrast in 2000, a total of 734,497 Americans were arrested for marijuana offenses, of which 646,042 were for possession alone. Marijuana Arrests and Total Drug Arrests in the US
     Year Total Drug Arrests Total MJ Arrests 2005 1,846,351 786,545 2004 1,745,712 771,605 2003 1,678,192 755,186 2002 1,538,813 697,082 2001 1,586,902 723,628 2000 1,579,566 734,497 1999 1,532,200 704,812 1998 1,559,100 682,885 1997 1,583,600 695,201 1996 1,506,200 641,642 1995 1,476,100 588,964 1990 1,089,500 326,850 1980 580,900 401,982 
    tetra
  • choosing life
    choosing life

    We do live in a crazy world. I have seen the benefit of marijuana on pain, depression, loss of appetite leading to wasting and even bi-polar disease. That the government can ban it says a lot about the freedoms we do not have.

    It is kinda like they are afraid the people might enjoy it and that we just can't have. Alcohol has proven to be a much bigger problem for society, but I don't think you will see that banned.

    The drug industry owns the politicians, so I don't think a change is coming soon.

    Tetra, I thought it was legal in Canada?

  • JeffT
    JeffT

    Just for the record: the last time this went to the USSC (and the federal ban on marijuana was upheld), Clarence Thomas wrote the dissenting opinion. He made a good case for allowing the states to make up their own minds about such things. Hopefully a few more will listen to him when it comes up this time.

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    nope. illegal. and the people who are activists here are getting deported to the states. gitmo for potheads.

    tetra

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    The main reason I posted this is because of a friend of mine. She is not a typical pot user (whatever that is) in the last several years she had had numerous back surgeries, including a botched one where hardware was installed poorly. She has a degenerative bone disease which keeps any of her surgeries from lasting too long.

    She's near 60 and a very smart hardworking lady who works as a loan officer for many years. She lives in excruciating pain, if she took any more pain Rx's she probably would become addicted. Every night she smokes a joint which has been the only thing that has worked to relax her enough to rest at home and get to sleep.

    The stress from constant pain releases all sorts of destructive chemical into your body. Her vertebrae are slowly deteriorating and after a while they won't hold all the screws, bolts, pins and other metal hardware. When that happens...well, imagine having mush for a spine.

    She's in the middle of changing jobs and they will drug test her. So, she's given the pot up for now. You cannot imagine the difference in her mood and quality of life. She needs the insurance benefits of this new job, knowing she'll be faced with more surgeries and pain pills she cannot afford now.

    Marijuana not only works, but, is much cheaper and safer that any of the powerful drugs she takes now.

    It just makes no sense to me that the cops may be ordered to arrest this single, working grandmother for trying to enjoy what's left of her life. To me...that truly is a "pursuit of happiness."

  • tetrapod.sapien
    tetrapod.sapien

    sorry to hear about your friend rabbit. it is very sad that she is denied this. i have been to a couple medical marijuana fundraisers, and man, so many sad stories of the police treating people who live in constant pain like criminals.

    tetra

  • Rabbit
    Rabbit

    Thank you, tetra. I am hoping that as mad as people are with Bush & friends...the Democrats will have a chance to swing the pendulum of social justice back towards the middle in 2008.

    Rabbit

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