News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Doctors Hazy On Medical Pot - Study |
Title: | Canada: Doctors Hazy On Medical Pot - Study |
Published On: | 2008-01-12 |
Source: | Edmonton Sun (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 23:42:40 |
DOCTORS HAZY ON MEDICAL POT - STUDY
OTTAWA -- Physicians who approve the use of medicinal marijuana say
their clinical knowledge of the drug is hazy and they rely heavily on
their patients to help them craft treatment plans, according to
interviews conducted for Health Canada.
The doctors' knowledge of medical marijuana "had most often come
directly (in anecdotal form) from their patients' experience with the
drug," concludes the study of physician attitudes by Montreal firm
Les Etudes de Marche Createc.
"This model obscures the boundary between physician and patient and
contravenes conventional medical practice which relies almost
exclusively on scientific evidence-based information," the study says.
"Many physicians expressed concern about this blurring of boundary."
The study, from March to June 2007, drew from a pool of 917 doctors
across the country. The group was then narrowed to 30.
Overall, the group did not view marijuana as a "high risk" drug and
agreed that the positive effects for medical purposes outweighed its
negative effects.
But doctors still felt they needed to know much more about marijuana.
Health Canada has authorized its use for severe pain, nausea and
muscle spasms among those with multiple sclerosis, spinal cord
injuries, arthritis, cancer and HIV/AIDS, and for seizures from epilepsy.
OTTAWA -- Physicians who approve the use of medicinal marijuana say
their clinical knowledge of the drug is hazy and they rely heavily on
their patients to help them craft treatment plans, according to
interviews conducted for Health Canada.
The doctors' knowledge of medical marijuana "had most often come
directly (in anecdotal form) from their patients' experience with the
drug," concludes the study of physician attitudes by Montreal firm
Les Etudes de Marche Createc.
"This model obscures the boundary between physician and patient and
contravenes conventional medical practice which relies almost
exclusively on scientific evidence-based information," the study says.
"Many physicians expressed concern about this blurring of boundary."
The study, from March to June 2007, drew from a pool of 917 doctors
across the country. The group was then narrowed to 30.
Overall, the group did not view marijuana as a "high risk" drug and
agreed that the positive effects for medical purposes outweighed its
negative effects.
But doctors still felt they needed to know much more about marijuana.
Health Canada has authorized its use for severe pain, nausea and
muscle spasms among those with multiple sclerosis, spinal cord
injuries, arthritis, cancer and HIV/AIDS, and for seizures from epilepsy.
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