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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Canadian Officials Consider Dutch Example Of Pharmacy
Title:Canada: Canadian Officials Consider Dutch Example Of Pharmacy
Published On:2003-04-28
Source:Halifax Herald (CN NS)
Fetched On:2008-01-20 18:52:21
CANADIAN OFFICIALS CONSIDER DUTCH EXAMPLE OF PHARMACY SALES

Under pressure from the courts to reform its medical marijuana policy,
Health Canada is considering a Dutch option in which marijuana would be
made available to needy patients at the corner pharmacy.

Senior Health Canada officials visited the Netherlands in February to learn
more about a new law that allows pharmacies to distribute government
marijuana to patients with a doctor's prescription.

The law, which became effective March 17, makes the Netherlands the first
country in the world to treat marijuana like an ordinary prescription drug.

"It's an option, like there are many options," said Beth Pieterson, a
Health Canada official who met with her counterparts in Amsterdam from Feb.
18 to 21.

Pieterson, director general of the drug strategy and controlled substances
program, cautioned that no decisions have been made.

"Yes, we're looking at this but we're looking at everything else, too," she
said in an interview from Ottawa.

Health Canada currently allows approved patients to smoke marijuana to
relieve symptoms such as pain and nausea. But there's no direct legal
supply of the substance, forcing patients to buy it on the street or from
growers who cultivate plants obtained from non-legal sources.

In January, Justice Sidney Lederman of Ontario's Superior Court declared
the Marijuana Medicinal Access Regulations unconstitutional.

"Laws which put seriously ill, vulnerable people in a position where they
have to deal with the criminal underworld to obtain medicine they have been
authorized to take violate the constitutional right to security of the
person," Lederman wrote in a 40-page ruling.

He gave Ottawa until July 9 to fix the regulations or supply the pot
itself. Health Canada has appealed the decision but the deadline remains.

"We are working towards having the appeal heard, with the hope that the
deadline would change," said Pieterson.

But if Ottawa loses the appeal or can't change the deadline "we will be
caught, and so we are looking at all our options."

The Dutch have also been promoting co-operation between the two countries
on the issue of medical marijuana.

Willem Scholten, a Netherlands government official, visited Ottawa on March
14 to discuss providing Dutch cannabis to Health Canada, among other issues.

"To us this is interesting too, because it gives some volume to our
production," Scholten said in a Jan. 23 e-mail setting up the meeting. "Our
growers have enough capacity."

The e-mail and related material was obtained under the Access to
Information Act.

Health Canada currently has a $5.7-million contract with a Flin Flon, Man.,
company that is growing certified marijuana for clinical trials only, but
there have been production problems.

Some in Canada's medical marijuana community are pressing Health Canada to
adopt the Dutch model as a quick and effective solution to the court quagmire.
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