News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Medical Marijuana From Feds |
Title: | Canada: Medical Marijuana From Feds |
Published On: | 2001-04-07 |
Source: | Saturday Okanagan, The (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-26 19:05:13 |
MEDICAL MARIJUANA FROM FEDS
Ottawa Proposes Regulations Covering Medical Use Of Marijuana
OTTAWA (CP) - Canada will become the only country in the world with a
government-regulated system for using marijuana as medicine, under
provisions unveiled Friday.
The marijuana access program is being justified partly on compassionate
grounds and partly as a scientific research effort, and is attracting
little criticism even from social conservatives.
"When people are seriously ill and in severe pain we would support
anything that would relieve their pain," said Diane Ablonczy of the
Canadian Alliance.
"Many people have found that smoking marijuana does do that."
Health Minister Allan Rock denied that the new rules are the "thin edge
of the wedge" for legalizing marijuana.
"I don't buy that," Rock said outside the Commons. "We've had medical
access to heroin and morphine for a long time and it hasn't been the
thin edge of the wedge for legalizing those drugs.
"I think people can distinguish in their own minds between, on the one
hand, allowing medical access to marijuana and on the other hand
allowing it to be used recreationally."
The proposed regulations would create three categories of patients, with
different rules for each. Easiest access would be for those expected to
die within a year.
Next would come people suffering severe pain, nausea, anorexia,
seizures, spasms or weakness from specified diseases including cancer,
AIDS, multiple sclerosis and arthritis.
These patients would require a statement from a medical specialist
saying conventional treatments have been tried and found inappropriate.
Patients with medical conditions not specified in the regulations would
fall into a third category, and would have to obtain statements from two
specialists.
The proposed rules would not allow so-called "compassion clubs" that
have sprung up in major cities to supply medical marijuana.
Every patient wishing to use medical pot would have to either grow it or
designate another person to grow it for him or her. A designated grower
would not be allowed to supply more than three patients.
Barry Burkholder, a Sudbury resident who suffers from hepatitis C, said
the proposed rules sound very bureaucratic.
"It's probably another tactic for them to put some red tape in," he
said.
Burkholder said many patients will have difficulty finding a doctor
willing to support their application. "We've got to get some information
to the doctors too."
The Health Department has for some time allowed special exemptions from
the criminal ban on marijuana possession, but patients say exemptions
are hard to get.
Last summer an Ontario judge ordered the government to clarify its rules
within one year. The proposed new regulations are a result of that
order.
Ottawa Proposes Regulations Covering Medical Use Of Marijuana
OTTAWA (CP) - Canada will become the only country in the world with a
government-regulated system for using marijuana as medicine, under
provisions unveiled Friday.
The marijuana access program is being justified partly on compassionate
grounds and partly as a scientific research effort, and is attracting
little criticism even from social conservatives.
"When people are seriously ill and in severe pain we would support
anything that would relieve their pain," said Diane Ablonczy of the
Canadian Alliance.
"Many people have found that smoking marijuana does do that."
Health Minister Allan Rock denied that the new rules are the "thin edge
of the wedge" for legalizing marijuana.
"I don't buy that," Rock said outside the Commons. "We've had medical
access to heroin and morphine for a long time and it hasn't been the
thin edge of the wedge for legalizing those drugs.
"I think people can distinguish in their own minds between, on the one
hand, allowing medical access to marijuana and on the other hand
allowing it to be used recreationally."
The proposed regulations would create three categories of patients, with
different rules for each. Easiest access would be for those expected to
die within a year.
Next would come people suffering severe pain, nausea, anorexia,
seizures, spasms or weakness from specified diseases including cancer,
AIDS, multiple sclerosis and arthritis.
These patients would require a statement from a medical specialist
saying conventional treatments have been tried and found inappropriate.
Patients with medical conditions not specified in the regulations would
fall into a third category, and would have to obtain statements from two
specialists.
The proposed rules would not allow so-called "compassion clubs" that
have sprung up in major cities to supply medical marijuana.
Every patient wishing to use medical pot would have to either grow it or
designate another person to grow it for him or her. A designated grower
would not be allowed to supply more than three patients.
Barry Burkholder, a Sudbury resident who suffers from hepatitis C, said
the proposed rules sound very bureaucratic.
"It's probably another tactic for them to put some red tape in," he
said.
Burkholder said many patients will have difficulty finding a doctor
willing to support their application. "We've got to get some information
to the doctors too."
The Health Department has for some time allowed special exemptions from
the criminal ban on marijuana possession, but patients say exemptions
are hard to get.
Last summer an Ontario judge ordered the government to clarify its rules
within one year. The proposed new regulations are a result of that
order.
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