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  • Medical Marijuana Documentary Sparks Bigger Debate
    Posted by CN Staff on November 14, 2007 at 17:10:23 PT
    By Deborah J. Siegelbaum
    Source: Medill Reports

    medical Illinois — Grass, pot, weed, bud, dope, cannabis – it’s a drug with many names. In some cultures it is considered a portal to another realm of consciousness, and vilified in others as a gateway drug to a life of addiction. But treatment for symptoms of diseases like AIDS, Multiple Sclerosis and other neurological disorders? Can it be that this illegal party drug is…a cure?

    The Film

    These are questions the documentary “Waiting to Inhale” explores. From a brief history of marijuana through its current status as an illegal substance by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, the film looks at benefits the drug may have that have long been overlooked.

    The documentary, currently screening across North America, met with cheers from the audience at Roosevelt University last Thursday evening. With interviews of doctors, patients, marijuana growers, advocates, opponents, and government officials, the documentary goes beyond a pro-drug propaganda piece. It becomes a convincing argument for how pot can help those in pain who have explored every pharmaceutical drug available.

    The Cycle

    An overarching theme of the documentary is the current catch-22 for medical marijuana. It is classified as a schedule 1 substance under the Controlled Substances Act, labeled as having a high potential for abuse and no current accepted medical use in treatment in the U.S.

    As a schedule 1 substance, cannabis can be researched only with federal approval and using a supply provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. This government monopoly on access to marijuana for medical testing has made clinical trials next to impossible to get off the ground. Because clinical trials are not undertaken, it is difficult to prove that marijuana could have beneficial properties. And so the cycle continues.

    The Panel

    A panel of experts and patients led by the film’s director, Jed Riffe, convened after the screening to discuss medical marijuana’s status in limbo.

    The Patient

    The non-profit marijuana advocacy group Americans for Safe Access, estimates that 300,000 Americans use medical marijuana. Marijuana has become a treatment for those suffering pain from MS, nausea and loss of appetite from AIDS, spasms from neurological disorders and many other ailments that have no set cure. Medical marijuana users report fewer side effects than those associated with legal prescription medications.

    Panelist Julie Falco, a patient suffering from MS, described years of pain and frustration trying every pharmaceutical treatment available, most of which made her worse.

    “Every time I took a medication, it was just so severe and depressing and discouraging that nothing was working.” Falco started using cannabis in 2004, ingesting it three times daily, and it alleviated the symptoms of her illness to such an extent that she is no longer on any other medication.

    “This is the drug that works for me,” she said, even though her treatment of choice is currently illegal.

    The Doctor

    Dr. Bruce Doblin, an internist and medical ethicist in Chicago, described the difficulty physicians face when patients could be helped by marijuana, but doctors are unable to prescribe it.

    “The frustrating thing about being a physician is that you take an oath dedicated to help people. There’s something right out there and it’s not available. What is available are a lot of pain medications that have all sorts of complications – those are very available, but complicated to take and complicated to prescribe.”

    A U.S. Department of Justice-appointed judge ruled in May that the DEA end its forty-year government monopoly on the supply of research-grade marijuana available for Food and Drug Administration-approved studies. With the monopoly broken, new medical studies could lead to accepted medical proof that marijuana has benefits in treatment.

    This is good news for physicians, but may not be the lynchpin needed to legalize medical marijuana across the U.S. For Doblin, the current status of medical marijuana as a banned substance is not based on its unproven effectiveness in medicine. “There’s decades of good experience showing that medical cannabis works. There’s really no debate about whether it works or not.”

    The Law

    James Gierach is a former Cook County prosecutor and current member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a non-profit organization of criminal justice professionals advocating the end of drug prohibition.

    Gierach described his former viewpoint that drug use was akin to violence, and he prosecuted offenders to the full extent of the law. But, over the years, after “seeing what the drug was has done for us,” he changed his mind.

    “The war on drugs not only doesn’t accomplish what it is designed to do – to keep drugs away from young people and save them – it is the heart of nearly any crisis that you can name in America.” Gierach listed issues such as guns, gangs, crime, health care and funding for terrorism as such problems enhanced by prohibition, and stated that “the good guys are on the same side as the drug dealers, and the reason is economics.”

    Gierach argued that the underground market for drugs drastically increases their value, to the point that marijuana has more value than gold. Legalizing the drug would remove the economic benefit and make it easier to regulate.

    “We must as a nation start discussing the harm that’s being done by the war on drugs, even though it was intended as an altruistic program to save our kids,” Gierach said.

    The Politics

    Lobbyist John Walker echoed this sentiment, and asked the audience if they were angry in the wake of the documentary screening. He requested that they channel that anger into action, and that they petition Congress to pass legislation legalizing the use of medical marijuana. “We’re at a tipping point…we are going to pass a medical marijuana bill here in Illinois this year. We’ve got to.”

    Medical Marijuana in Illinois

    House Bill 0407, the Medical Cannabis Act, was introduced in the Illinois House by Rep. Larry McKeon, a former Los Angeles police officer, on January 26, 2005. The act “provides that a person who has been diagnosed by a physician as having a debilitating medical condition and the person’s primary caregiver may be issued a registry identification card by the Department of Human Services that permits the person or the person’s primary caregiver to legally possess no more than 12 cannabis plants and two and one-half ounces of usable cannabis.”

    Those in possession of a registry identification card are not subject to arrest, prosecution or penalty.

    McKeon, himself a patient living with AIDS, has witnessed first-hand the beneficial effects marijuana can have. “I’ve seen medical marijuana help others and know that many physicians recommend it. I don’t know if I will ever need medical marijuana, but no one battling a life-threatening illness should face arrest and jail for simply trying to stay alive,” McKeon said in an interview posted on MedicalMJ.org.

    HB0407 is currently under review by the House Human Services Committee.

    The use of marijuana for medical purposes is currently legal in twelve states: California, Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.

    Last screening of “Waiting to Inhale” in Illinois:
    Thursday, Nov. 15, 2007
    7 pm – 9:30 pm
    Southern Illinois University,
    Student Center Auditorium
    Carbondale, Illinois

    Source: Medill Reports (IL)
    Author: Deborah J. Siegelbaum
    Published: November 14, 2007
    Copyright: 2007 Medill Reports – Chicago, Northwestern University
    Contact: k-nugent-1@northwestern.edu
    Website: http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/

    Related Article & Web Site:

    Waiting To Inhale
    http://www.waitingtoinhale.org/

    Documentary To Educate About Medical Marijuana
    http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread23467.shtml

    the wider problem which needs to be surmounted is that there is already an estabished trend of medical professionals worldwide being discouraged from prescribing effective preparations simply because they have an recreational/abuse potential.

    amfetamines for instance have some beneficial results for dealing with a lot of respiratory complaints – yes they do have risks but so do many other substances taken in excess.

    it was once possible to buy all sorts of things OTC – opiates, stimulants etc. Yes there were addicts and overdoses and even crimes commited to fund habits but the level of this criminality was far less than today as at least there wasn’t a black market…

    it needs the whole UN involved, not just America or Britain. What is particularly saddening is that despite rival nations being prepared to blow each other to atoms over religion or oil resources, the people in power still agree that recreational drug use should be illegal :you_crazy

    They basically disapprove of any substance which is fun or causes the general public to questions their view of the world :you_crazy

    Imagine the tax they could rake in if the illegal stuff was legal [and the concurrent saving on law enforcement and crowding in jail…..] – the illegal aspect simply doesnt add up from that particular point of view.

    The only way to kill a black market is for what you were buying on it to be reliably and reasonably priced in the normal market. What use would those suburban cannabis factories be if the stuff was legal to grow or buy for personal use? Plus it could then be researched and all its various risks catalogued and its uses investigated.

    I know many people with conditions which are only relieved by using some form of cannabis and they risk arrest on a daily basis merely to have an aceptable quality of life – I defy those who are maintaining the prohibition to suffer from those conditions themselves and not resort to whatever treatment allowed them to have a life.

    MS sufferers as an example: for some of these folks using cannabis enables them to walk and actually do things where before they needed a wheelchair and needed almost full time care as they were almost completely unable to do even the most simple things. :you_crazy:you_crazy:you_crazy
    Its illegal to make our pets suffer but legal and compulsory by law to deny MS, Aids and other disease sufferers relief from their conditions from a plant which can be easily cultivated in even european gardens. :crazy_diz

    Raj wrote:
    They basically disapprove of any substance which is fun or causes the general public to questions their view of the world :you_crazy

    :crazy_diz

    exactly

    Raj wrote:
    I know many people with conditions which are only relieved by using some form of cannabis and they risk arrest on a daily basis merely to have an aceptable quality of life – I defy those who are maintaining the prohibition to suffer from those conditions themselves and not resort to whatever treatment allowed them to have a life.

    in the news today some ex-speedway champ got busted for growing loads for his own use (he has already been in the can once for this.)

    Although he admitted to being a recreational user as well, and there is a big thing about his “drugs downfall”, from my friends experiences of riding motorbikes fast anyone who does so seems invariably to fall off at least once and bust a few bones..

    can’t help but I wonder if he what he was doing (perhaps without realising) all those years was self-medicating to deal with the pain/recovery from sport-related injuries, during his time as a sportsman all these people must have been saying “wow, look at him bounce back so quickly” but now because he dared to do drugs hes branded a criminal…

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Forums Drugs Cannabis & Hashish Medical Marijuana MM documentary sparks bigger debate…