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Iowa State Daily
Friday, March 21, 1997, Page 1
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Medical marijuana also surging
by JONQUIL WEGMANN
Daily Staff Writer
Amid the political
controversy surrounding medicinal marijuana legalization in California and Arizona, the
Iowa House is reviewing a bill calling for research of the medical merits of the plant.
State Representative Ed Fallon introduced the
bill, calling for research at the University of lowa. Now six Republicans and seven
Democrats in the Iowa Senate say they support changes in law to prevent the arrest and
prosecution of medicinal marijuana users. Ten Republicans and nine Democrats in the
Iowa House support changes.
Carl Olsen, of Iowa's NORML chapter, is working
on behalf of Iowans for Medical Marijuana to reclassify marijuana as a drug to permit its
medical use.
"The main reason it should be legalized is
because it's cruel and inhuman to put people in prison and jail for trying to relieve
their pain," Olsen said.
Olsen said the issue is not whether marijuana
has medicinal use - he concedes it needs more research - but that sick people are being
denied relief. Numerous medical and scientific associations, journals, researchers
and practitioners have said marijuana has at least some medical validity.
It has been found to reduce seizures of
epileptic patients, nerve disorders of multiple sclerosis, nausea of cancer patients, eye
pressure of glaucoma patients and can also thwart the waste syndrome of AIDS patients.
For the past 10 years in Iowa, THC, the
psychoactive medicinal component of the marijuana plant, has been available in a pill form
cailed Marinol. However, patients complain it is too strong and too expensive -
nearly $5 per pill. They say they cannot control the dosage.
Researchers believe marijuana may have about 40
chemical components of therapeutic value. Unlike THC, many of these chemicals are
reported to have no psychoactive effects.
Among other medical uses, a recent study in
Florida showed that THC placed in a test tube with a herpes virus killed the virus.