News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Canadian Cannabis Regs Implemented |
Title: | Canada: Canadian Cannabis Regs Implemented |
Published On: | 2001-07-31 |
Source: | Daily Camera (CO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 12:15:31 |
CANADIAN CANNABIS REGS IMPLEMENTED
TORONTO -(AP)- New regulations took effect Monday expanding the number
of Canadians allowed to use medical marijuana, but those eligible say
the system resembles a bureaucratic maze likely to delay hundreds more
from participating.
The rules are part of the first system in the world that includes a
government-approved and paid-for supply of marijuana for people
suffering from terminal illnesses and chronic conditions such as
multiple sclerosis or severe arthritis.
Patients may grow their own pot, or designate someone to grow it for
them. In addition, the health department is paying a Saskatchewan
company to grow government marijuana for eligible patients and use in
research.
While medical marijuana advocates in the United States look at the
Canadian system with envy, some users north of the border complain
hurdles remain in place.
"I still have to fend for myself," said Jim Bridges, 37, who already has
government permission to use marijuana for the pain and nausea of AIDS.
He automatically comes under the new regulations but is awaiting word on
how to submit a photo for the identification card legal pot smokers will
have to carry.
Almost 300 Canadians such as Bridges previously were exempted from
federal drug laws that make it a criminal offense to grow and possess
marijuana. Health department officials say hundreds more have applied,
and the figure could reach the thousands.
Roslyn Tremblay, a Health Canada spokeswoman, said Monday that
application forms under the new regulations would be available "very
soon," but she was unable to provide a specific date.
To join up, applicants must submit verifiable medical records and have a
doctor's endorsement. Cases except for critically terminal patients
require further supporting documents from another doctor.
The new rules permit drug possession for the terminally ill with a
prognosis of death within one year; those with symptoms associated with
specific serious medical conditions; and those with other medical
conditions who have statements from two doctors saying conventional
treatments have not worked. Eligible patients include those with severe
arthritis, cancer, HIV/AIDS and multiple sclerosis.
The government regulations meet a court-ordered deadline for Canada to
create a system for terminally ill patients previously exempted from
criminal marijuana laws to have a legal way to obtain the drug.
The Canadian Medical Association, which represents tens of thousands of
doctors, opposes the new regulations because they make physicians
responsible for prescribing a substance that lacks significant clinical
research on its effects. Without the cooperation of doctors, patients
cannot get medical marijuana exemptions.
TORONTO -(AP)- New regulations took effect Monday expanding the number
of Canadians allowed to use medical marijuana, but those eligible say
the system resembles a bureaucratic maze likely to delay hundreds more
from participating.
The rules are part of the first system in the world that includes a
government-approved and paid-for supply of marijuana for people
suffering from terminal illnesses and chronic conditions such as
multiple sclerosis or severe arthritis.
Patients may grow their own pot, or designate someone to grow it for
them. In addition, the health department is paying a Saskatchewan
company to grow government marijuana for eligible patients and use in
research.
While medical marijuana advocates in the United States look at the
Canadian system with envy, some users north of the border complain
hurdles remain in place.
"I still have to fend for myself," said Jim Bridges, 37, who already has
government permission to use marijuana for the pain and nausea of AIDS.
He automatically comes under the new regulations but is awaiting word on
how to submit a photo for the identification card legal pot smokers will
have to carry.
Almost 300 Canadians such as Bridges previously were exempted from
federal drug laws that make it a criminal offense to grow and possess
marijuana. Health department officials say hundreds more have applied,
and the figure could reach the thousands.
Roslyn Tremblay, a Health Canada spokeswoman, said Monday that
application forms under the new regulations would be available "very
soon," but she was unable to provide a specific date.
To join up, applicants must submit verifiable medical records and have a
doctor's endorsement. Cases except for critically terminal patients
require further supporting documents from another doctor.
The new rules permit drug possession for the terminally ill with a
prognosis of death within one year; those with symptoms associated with
specific serious medical conditions; and those with other medical
conditions who have statements from two doctors saying conventional
treatments have not worked. Eligible patients include those with severe
arthritis, cancer, HIV/AIDS and multiple sclerosis.
The government regulations meet a court-ordered deadline for Canada to
create a system for terminally ill patients previously exempted from
criminal marijuana laws to have a legal way to obtain the drug.
The Canadian Medical Association, which represents tens of thousands of
doctors, opposes the new regulations because they make physicians
responsible for prescribing a substance that lacks significant clinical
research on its effects. Without the cooperation of doctors, patients
cannot get medical marijuana exemptions.
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