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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Editorial: MMJ: Voters Should OK Medical Use Of Marijuana
Title:US WA: Editorial: MMJ: Voters Should OK Medical Use Of Marijuana
Published On:1998-10-07
Source:Columbian, The (WA)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 23:17:53
VOTERS SHOULD OK MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA

Marijuana is no different than morphine. If used properly, both can have
therapeutic benefits for people with severe health conditions. If used
improperly, both can have health-threatening side effects.

But if a doctor prescribes morphine, he's a healer. If he provides
marijuana, he's a felon.

Initiative 692 doesn't legalize drugs or turn drug dealers loose or allow
kids to trade joints on the school playground. All it does is treat
marijuana like any other medicinal chemical: tightly controlled, but
available for patients who truly need it.

There is ample research and overwhelming anecdotal evidence that marijuana
can, in certain cases, provide relief from pain, nausea and seizures more
effectively than any other substance. The latest is a federal study that
finds cannabidiol, a component of marijuana, can help the survival rate of
stroke victims by blocking the compounds caused by a restricted blood supply
to the brain.

Likewise, marijuana has proved effective in fending off the nausea caused by
chemotherapy in cancer patients; in stimulating the appetites of those
stricken by AIDS; and in controlling or reducing the spasticity in those
afflicted by multiple sclerosis.

This isn't just the opinion of a few stoner doctors. Ten years ago, an
administrative law judge for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration
concluded: "The evidence in this record clearly shows that marijuana has
been accepted as capable of relieving the distress of great numbers of very
ill people, and doing so with safety under medical supervision."

Unlike last year's medicinal marijuana initiative, which The Columbian
opposed, I-692 is narrowly drawn and provides ample safeguards. Only
qualifying patients, as defined by the state Medical Quality Assurance
Board, would be eligible to use marijuana. Only certified physicians,
conducting themselves under the strict licensing and oversight rules of the
state, would be allowed to prescribe marijuana.

Our society has long outgrown the goofy notion of marijuana as "devil weed."
It's a drug, with capacity to help or hurt, and should be treated as such.

Checked-by: Don Beck
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