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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Advocacy Group's Suit Calls On U.S. To Acknowledge Pot's Medicinal Value
Title:US: Advocacy Group's Suit Calls On U.S. To Acknowledge Pot's Medicinal Value
Published On:2007-02-22
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 12:22:56
ADVOCACY GROUP'S SUIT CALLS ON U.S. TO ACKNOWLEDGE POT'S MEDICINAL VALUE

SACRAMENTO -- A patient advocacy group sued the federal government
Wednesday to try to force U.S. health agencies to acknowledge that
marijuana has merit as a medicine.

The lawsuit by Americans for Safe Access follows a two-year effort to
reverse what it calls a "misinformation campaign" by U.S. health agencies.

Americans for Safe Access is suing under the Data Quality Act, a
little-known statute that lets citizens challenge the accuracy of
government-disseminated information.

The Oakland-based group filed a petition in October 2004 asking the
United States to reverse its staunch opposition to pot as medicine.
After months of delays, the government rejected the petition.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services said
the agency could not comment because of the litigation.

For years, U.S. regulators have said marijuana has no accepted medicinal value.

Such statements are "false and misleading," Americans for Safe Access
said in its lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Oakland. The
group cited peer-reviewed studies suggesting cannabis can be
effective for AIDS wasting, muscle spasticity and chronic pain.

The government's stance ignores its own studies, activists say.

A 1999 report by the Institute of Medicine declared that marijuana
showed medicinal promise and advocated the development of cannabis-based drugs.

Since then, the University of California has begun several rigorous
studies to test marijuana's medical efficacy. Last week, a UC San
Francisco researcher announced that clinical trials found marijuana
helped treat HIV pain.

Meanwhile, British drug company GW Pharmaceuticals won Canadian
approval for a marijuana spray for multiple sclerosis. The firm hopes
to eventually market Sativex in the United States.
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