News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: UC Research Center To Study Medical Value Of Pot |
Title: | US CA: UC Research Center To Study Medical Value Of Pot |
Published On: | 2000-08-30 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 10:39:19 |
UC RESEARCH CENTER TO STUDY MEDICAL VALUE OF POT
Health: The aim of the San Diego facility will be to develop data to help
counties implement new state law.
SAN DIEGO--In an effort to determine whether marijuana has medical value,
the University of California on Tuesday announced a new cannabis study
center to include researchers, doctors and patients throughout the state.
With its headquarters at UC San Diego, the center will attempt to develop
scientific data to help counties craft guidelines for the medical use of
marijuana, which was decriminalized by a 1996 ballot initiative adopted by
California voters.
Although many cancer patients and others say marijuana relieves their
suffering when other remedies prove useless, scientific proof has been
limited, officials said.
Some counties, notably San Francisco and Santa Clara, have plunged ahead
with the law. Others, including Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego, have been
confounded by unanswered medical questions about what kinds of conditions
are best treated with marijuana.
Since Proposition 215 was adopted by 56% of voters, the issue has been
caught in nonstop controversy. One problem is that federal law still labels
marijuana an illegal substance.
On Tuesday, just as the UC announcement was being made, the U.S. Supreme
Court granted a request from the U.S. Department of Justice to postpone a
lower court ruling in an Oakland case that would have allowed so-called
cannabis clubs to distribute marijuana.
Dr. Igor Grant, a professor of psychiatry at UCSD who will serve as director
of the center, said the high court decision shows why the center is needed.
"Without reliable, substantial information about marijuana, I'm doubtful
that any progress will be made" in resolving the controversy, he said.
The center will concentrate on conditions for which anecdotal evidence and
early research suggest marijuana might be useful to relieve pain, nausea and
loss of appetite: cancer, HIV and multiple sclerosis. Grant said both
clinical trials and basic research will be conducted.
The state, under a bill sponsored by Sen. John Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara),
has funded the center with $3 million, with millions more expected to come
from federal grants as researchers at other UC campuses begin applying.
The National Institutes of Health, the National Academy of Sciences and
federal drug czar Barry R. McCaffrey have all called for additional studies
to examine whether marijuana's value can be scientifically proved.
UC San Francisco cancer specialist Dr. Donald Abrams hailed the creation of
a center as a major step. Abrams just completed the first clinical trial
using inhaled marijuana in treating persons with HIV.
Abrams said the initial findings are positive enough to merit follow-up
studies. "This state funding will allow that to happen quickly so that we
may finally get some needed answers," he said.
Dennis Peron, founder of the San Francisco Cannabis Club and the chief
author of Proposition 215, was critical of what he called yet another
misguided marijuana study.
"We already have more than 10,000 studies--this drug has been studied like
crazy," Peron said in San Francisco. "Look at it this way: They just found
out how aspirin works. They'll never understand how marijuana works. One
day, they'll just have to accept that it works."
Peron called the study a thinly veiled stall tactic. "Essentially, they're
trying to stall the whole marijuana revolution," he said.
Health: The aim of the San Diego facility will be to develop data to help
counties implement new state law.
SAN DIEGO--In an effort to determine whether marijuana has medical value,
the University of California on Tuesday announced a new cannabis study
center to include researchers, doctors and patients throughout the state.
With its headquarters at UC San Diego, the center will attempt to develop
scientific data to help counties craft guidelines for the medical use of
marijuana, which was decriminalized by a 1996 ballot initiative adopted by
California voters.
Although many cancer patients and others say marijuana relieves their
suffering when other remedies prove useless, scientific proof has been
limited, officials said.
Some counties, notably San Francisco and Santa Clara, have plunged ahead
with the law. Others, including Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego, have been
confounded by unanswered medical questions about what kinds of conditions
are best treated with marijuana.
Since Proposition 215 was adopted by 56% of voters, the issue has been
caught in nonstop controversy. One problem is that federal law still labels
marijuana an illegal substance.
On Tuesday, just as the UC announcement was being made, the U.S. Supreme
Court granted a request from the U.S. Department of Justice to postpone a
lower court ruling in an Oakland case that would have allowed so-called
cannabis clubs to distribute marijuana.
Dr. Igor Grant, a professor of psychiatry at UCSD who will serve as director
of the center, said the high court decision shows why the center is needed.
"Without reliable, substantial information about marijuana, I'm doubtful
that any progress will be made" in resolving the controversy, he said.
The center will concentrate on conditions for which anecdotal evidence and
early research suggest marijuana might be useful to relieve pain, nausea and
loss of appetite: cancer, HIV and multiple sclerosis. Grant said both
clinical trials and basic research will be conducted.
The state, under a bill sponsored by Sen. John Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara),
has funded the center with $3 million, with millions more expected to come
from federal grants as researchers at other UC campuses begin applying.
The National Institutes of Health, the National Academy of Sciences and
federal drug czar Barry R. McCaffrey have all called for additional studies
to examine whether marijuana's value can be scientifically proved.
UC San Francisco cancer specialist Dr. Donald Abrams hailed the creation of
a center as a major step. Abrams just completed the first clinical trial
using inhaled marijuana in treating persons with HIV.
Abrams said the initial findings are positive enough to merit follow-up
studies. "This state funding will allow that to happen quickly so that we
may finally get some needed answers," he said.
Dennis Peron, founder of the San Francisco Cannabis Club and the chief
author of Proposition 215, was critical of what he called yet another
misguided marijuana study.
"We already have more than 10,000 studies--this drug has been studied like
crazy," Peron said in San Francisco. "Look at it this way: They just found
out how aspirin works. They'll never understand how marijuana works. One
day, they'll just have to accept that it works."
Peron called the study a thinly veiled stall tactic. "Essentially, they're
trying to stall the whole marijuana revolution," he said.
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