News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: OPED: Medical Marijuana: Why - and How |
Title: | CN BC: OPED: Medical Marijuana: Why - and How |
Published On: | 2004-03-30 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 13:50:46 |
MEDICAL MARIJUANA: WHY - AND HOW - OTTAWA MUST MAKE IT EASIER TO ACQUIRE
AND DISTRIBUTE
Having first heard of Health Canada's plan to explore the distribution
of cannabis through pharmacies a few months ago, the media frenzy
around this pilot project announced last week has been a bit of a
surprise to me.
Although it is encouraging to finally see pharmacists recognize the
safety and effectiveness of medicinal cannabis, is this plan really in
the best interest of Canada's 700 or so legal users, and the public at
large who would be funding this expensive pilot program?
First let's examine who might benefit from having pot in B.C.
pharmacies. According to the latest Health Canada statistics, there
are currently 115 federally licensed users in B.C. -- since about 10
per cent of legal users have ordered their cannabis from the
government, that would add up to a mere 12 potential participants in
this program.
Robin O'Brien, the consulting pharmacist organizing this pilot program
has stated that according to Health Canada's own statistics, about
seven per cent of people in B.C. (about 290,000) currently claim to
use cannabis for medical purposes. Unfortunately, the incredible
bureaucratic hurdles posed by the Marijuana Medical Access Regulations
coupled with a continued reluctance of the Canadian Medical
Association to support the use of medicinal cannabis has resulted in
just 150 new registrations to the federal program every year.
By comparison, the non-profit, Vancouver-based B.C. Compassion Club
Society, Canada's oldest and biggest distributor of medicinal
cannabis, helps more than 2,700 critically and chronically ill members
gain access to a safe and affordable supply of cannabis, all at no
cost to the taxpayer.
So this expensive, federally funded program won't affect many people,
but isn't it a positive step to finally get cannabis in pharmacies?
The answer to this is both "yes" and "no." It would be an incredible
step to make multiple strains of safe, organic cannabis available in
pharmacies to be distributed by qualified experts. Unfortunately, all
of this expertise currently resides in compassion clubs, and the
federal government has not seen fit to either license, regulate or
work with them.
Canada's compassion clubs and societies are safely and effectively
distributing cannabis to more than 7,000 critically and chronically ill
Canadians. They also are doing more legitimate research than Health Canada:
The Vancouver Island Compassion Society, of which I am founder and director,
is conducting hepatitis C research with the University of California at Los
Angeles, nausea and pregnancy research with the University of B.C., and will
soon begin the first high-THC chronic pain and smoked cannabis double-blind
protocol in North America. And they are doing all of this at no cost to the
taxpayer.
In addition, compassion clubs distribute to more than half of the 700
legally registered exemptees, compared to the 10 per cent who
currently order their cannabis from the government.
If Health Canada truly cared about the end users of this program,
which sadly are some of Canada's sickest citizens, they should start
by licensing compassion societies.
The real problem is that this pilot program's sole offering would be
the single strain of cannabis grown by Prairie Plant Systems at the
bottom of a mineshaft in Flin Flon, Man., one of North America's most
environmentally contaminated areas. Tests conducted by Canadians for
Safe Access indicate that not only is this cannabis weaker than the
government claims, but that it may also be high in heavy metals such
as lead and arsenic. At least 10 per cent of the 78 exemptees who have
ordered the federal cannabis have either returned it or refused to pay
for it because of its poor quality.
So as a legal user of cannabis, I applaud the enthusiasm of B.C.
pharmacists to address this important issue, but before they undertake
an expensive, taxpayer-funded program to get cannabis into the
drugstores, I urge them to:
- - Pressure Health Canada to license and regulate the organizations
that have the most relevant experience in this matter -- the
compassion clubs -- and have pharmacists work with them to better
understand the safe and effective cultivation and distribution of cannabis.
- - Lobby Health Canada to improve access to the program by making
access to medicinal cannabis possible with a simple physician's or
health care practitioner's recommendation.
- - Make the implementation of this pilot project conditional on Ottawa
supplying pharmacies with multiple strains of high-potency,
organically grown cannabis.
AND DISTRIBUTE
Having first heard of Health Canada's plan to explore the distribution
of cannabis through pharmacies a few months ago, the media frenzy
around this pilot project announced last week has been a bit of a
surprise to me.
Although it is encouraging to finally see pharmacists recognize the
safety and effectiveness of medicinal cannabis, is this plan really in
the best interest of Canada's 700 or so legal users, and the public at
large who would be funding this expensive pilot program?
First let's examine who might benefit from having pot in B.C.
pharmacies. According to the latest Health Canada statistics, there
are currently 115 federally licensed users in B.C. -- since about 10
per cent of legal users have ordered their cannabis from the
government, that would add up to a mere 12 potential participants in
this program.
Robin O'Brien, the consulting pharmacist organizing this pilot program
has stated that according to Health Canada's own statistics, about
seven per cent of people in B.C. (about 290,000) currently claim to
use cannabis for medical purposes. Unfortunately, the incredible
bureaucratic hurdles posed by the Marijuana Medical Access Regulations
coupled with a continued reluctance of the Canadian Medical
Association to support the use of medicinal cannabis has resulted in
just 150 new registrations to the federal program every year.
By comparison, the non-profit, Vancouver-based B.C. Compassion Club
Society, Canada's oldest and biggest distributor of medicinal
cannabis, helps more than 2,700 critically and chronically ill members
gain access to a safe and affordable supply of cannabis, all at no
cost to the taxpayer.
So this expensive, federally funded program won't affect many people,
but isn't it a positive step to finally get cannabis in pharmacies?
The answer to this is both "yes" and "no." It would be an incredible
step to make multiple strains of safe, organic cannabis available in
pharmacies to be distributed by qualified experts. Unfortunately, all
of this expertise currently resides in compassion clubs, and the
federal government has not seen fit to either license, regulate or
work with them.
Canada's compassion clubs and societies are safely and effectively
distributing cannabis to more than 7,000 critically and chronically ill
Canadians. They also are doing more legitimate research than Health Canada:
The Vancouver Island Compassion Society, of which I am founder and director,
is conducting hepatitis C research with the University of California at Los
Angeles, nausea and pregnancy research with the University of B.C., and will
soon begin the first high-THC chronic pain and smoked cannabis double-blind
protocol in North America. And they are doing all of this at no cost to the
taxpayer.
In addition, compassion clubs distribute to more than half of the 700
legally registered exemptees, compared to the 10 per cent who
currently order their cannabis from the government.
If Health Canada truly cared about the end users of this program,
which sadly are some of Canada's sickest citizens, they should start
by licensing compassion societies.
The real problem is that this pilot program's sole offering would be
the single strain of cannabis grown by Prairie Plant Systems at the
bottom of a mineshaft in Flin Flon, Man., one of North America's most
environmentally contaminated areas. Tests conducted by Canadians for
Safe Access indicate that not only is this cannabis weaker than the
government claims, but that it may also be high in heavy metals such
as lead and arsenic. At least 10 per cent of the 78 exemptees who have
ordered the federal cannabis have either returned it or refused to pay
for it because of its poor quality.
So as a legal user of cannabis, I applaud the enthusiasm of B.C.
pharmacists to address this important issue, but before they undertake
an expensive, taxpayer-funded program to get cannabis into the
drugstores, I urge them to:
- - Pressure Health Canada to license and regulate the organizations
that have the most relevant experience in this matter -- the
compassion clubs -- and have pharmacists work with them to better
understand the safe and effective cultivation and distribution of cannabis.
- - Lobby Health Canada to improve access to the program by making
access to medicinal cannabis possible with a simple physician's or
health care practitioner's recommendation.
- - Make the implementation of this pilot project conditional on Ottawa
supplying pharmacies with multiple strains of high-potency,
organically grown cannabis.
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