News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Medicinal Cannabis Works, but Costly: NORML |
Title: | New Zealand: Medicinal Cannabis Works, but Costly: NORML |
Published On: | 2010-11-04 |
Source: | Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) |
Fetched On: | 2010-11-06 03:00:29 |
MEDICINAL CANNABIS WORKS, BUT COSTLY: NORML
New Zealand patients suffering pain which cannot be managed with
conventional pain-killers have had success with medicinal cannabis -
but found it was much more costly than supplies of illicit cannabis,
a lobbyist for the legalisation of cannabis says.
"They would rather be smoking cannabis than taking the commercial
drug: they find the cannabis more effective, cheaper, and more
pleasant to take," NORML spokesman Chris Fowlie told NZPA.
"But growing their own or buying it illegally brings significant risks."
A consent notice to distribute cannabis extracts in New Zealand as a
branded drug, Sativex, has been gazetted, the British drug
manufacturer, GW Pharmaceuticals, said today.
It is planning to appoint a commercial partner in New Zealand to
distribute the drug, a spray administered under the tongue.
Its Sativex treatment - approved for the relief of spasticity in
multiple sclerosis (MS) patients - contains two active ingredients,
THC and CBD, from whole plant extracts from the cannabis sativa plant.
A common symptom in the degenerative nerve disease, spasticity -
continuous or repeatedly muscle contractions - can interfere with
movements, speech, and walking and may include severe, painful, and
uncontrollable muscle spasms.
Medsafe has spent over two years considering whether to allow the
marketing and sale of the cannabis spray as the Government has come
under increasing pressure from some patients and scientists to
legalise cannabis use to alleviate chronic pain for accident victims,
and some sufferers of multiple sclerosis and cancer.
Mr Fowlie said about five people with neuropathic pain were already
using the drug, with ministerial approval.
"Getting approval is one thing, but paying for it is another," he
said. The initial legal user, who lived near Nelson, had his Sativex
funded by ACC for back pain, but other patients had said paying for
the drug was more expensive than buying illicit cannabis.
"They all believe Sativex works," he said.
It was cheaper than traditional pharmaceuticals, which sometimes did
not adequately suppress pain, and it had an instant effect which made
it easier to monitor the dosages.
Some patients also did not like the alcohol base of the spray:
several users had suffered alcohol "burns" in their mouth and they
had to find a new spot to spray up to 20 times a day.
Mr Fowlie said patients were now waiting for drug funding agency
Pharmac to consider whether it would subsidise the drug, which he
said cost about $300 for a small bottle that lasted patients between
a week and a month, depending on their dosage.
A spokesman for Pharmac said it had not received any funding
application, and it had not paid for any of the drug used under
ministerial approval.
In its application to Medsafe, GW Pharmaceuticals said that in
therapeutic doses, Sativex may produce side-effects "interpreted as a
euphoria or cannabis-like high".
New Zealand patients suffering pain which cannot be managed with
conventional pain-killers have had success with medicinal cannabis -
but found it was much more costly than supplies of illicit cannabis,
a lobbyist for the legalisation of cannabis says.
"They would rather be smoking cannabis than taking the commercial
drug: they find the cannabis more effective, cheaper, and more
pleasant to take," NORML spokesman Chris Fowlie told NZPA.
"But growing their own or buying it illegally brings significant risks."
A consent notice to distribute cannabis extracts in New Zealand as a
branded drug, Sativex, has been gazetted, the British drug
manufacturer, GW Pharmaceuticals, said today.
It is planning to appoint a commercial partner in New Zealand to
distribute the drug, a spray administered under the tongue.
Its Sativex treatment - approved for the relief of spasticity in
multiple sclerosis (MS) patients - contains two active ingredients,
THC and CBD, from whole plant extracts from the cannabis sativa plant.
A common symptom in the degenerative nerve disease, spasticity -
continuous or repeatedly muscle contractions - can interfere with
movements, speech, and walking and may include severe, painful, and
uncontrollable muscle spasms.
Medsafe has spent over two years considering whether to allow the
marketing and sale of the cannabis spray as the Government has come
under increasing pressure from some patients and scientists to
legalise cannabis use to alleviate chronic pain for accident victims,
and some sufferers of multiple sclerosis and cancer.
Mr Fowlie said about five people with neuropathic pain were already
using the drug, with ministerial approval.
"Getting approval is one thing, but paying for it is another," he
said. The initial legal user, who lived near Nelson, had his Sativex
funded by ACC for back pain, but other patients had said paying for
the drug was more expensive than buying illicit cannabis.
"They all believe Sativex works," he said.
It was cheaper than traditional pharmaceuticals, which sometimes did
not adequately suppress pain, and it had an instant effect which made
it easier to monitor the dosages.
Some patients also did not like the alcohol base of the spray:
several users had suffered alcohol "burns" in their mouth and they
had to find a new spot to spray up to 20 times a day.
Mr Fowlie said patients were now waiting for drug funding agency
Pharmac to consider whether it would subsidise the drug, which he
said cost about $300 for a small bottle that lasted patients between
a week and a month, depending on their dosage.
A spokesman for Pharmac said it had not received any funding
application, and it had not paid for any of the drug used under
ministerial approval.
In its application to Medsafe, GW Pharmaceuticals said that in
therapeutic doses, Sativex may produce side-effects "interpreted as a
euphoria or cannabis-like high".
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