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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS |
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202-483-0057 E-MAIL NATLNORML@AOL.COM
Internet http://www.norml.org
. . . a weekly service for the
media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition.
February 13, 1997
NORML, Others Respond To
Upcoming NIDA Conference
On Medical Marijuana
February 13, 1996, Washington, D.C.:
The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) is convening a
two-day conference next week to assess existing scientific
research regarding marijuana's therapeutic potential. The
conference was announced following public criticism from some
members of the medical establishment over the Administration's
refusal to allow physicians to prescribe marijuana for seriously
ill patients in accordance with recently passed state initiatives
in Arizona and California. The conference will take place
on February 19 and 20.
National Institute of Health officials claim that the conference
will remain solely scientific in nature, and Drug Czar General
Barry McCaffrey has publicly stated that he does not expect to
attend the conference. However, many medical marijuana
proponents remain doubtful that the conference will remain devoid
of politics.
"It seems ironic that the same federal agency that has twice
denied the marijuana necessary to conduct an FDA-approved
protocol by San Francisco researcher Dr. Donald Abrams on the
effects of marijuana and the AIDS wasting syndrome, and has
stonewalled proposed state-sponsored medical marijuana studies by
both Washington State University and the Massachusetts Department
of Health will be an objective moderator for this scientific
review," said NORML's Deputy Director Allen
St. Pierre. He announced that NORML, in
conjunction with other Washington D.C.-based drug-law reform
organizations, will be holding a press conference on Wednesday,
February 19, where doctors and patients will speak in favor of
marijuana's medical value. Dr. John Morgan of City
University of New York Medical School, NORML
Board Member Lynn Zimmer, Ph.D., of Queens College, and former
medical marijuana user Richard Brookhiser -- Senior Editor of
National Review -- are expected to speak the press conference,
along with various medical marijuana patients.
Medical marijuana proponents will present NIDA officials with a
compendium of over 75 scientific studies demonstrating
marijuana's medical effectiveness in the treatment of glaucoma,
spasticity disorders, the nausea associated with cancer
chemotherapy, and other serious illnesses. Included in the
compendium are the results of several state-sponsored clinical
trials involving hundreds of patients. For example, a 1983
report evaluating the effects of marijuana as an anti-emetic in
cancer patients released by Tennessee Board of Pharmacy
concluded: "We found both marijuana smoking and THC
capsules to be effective anti-emetics. We found an
approximate 23 percent higher success rate among
those patients smoking than among those patients
administered THC capsules." [Emphasis added.
--ed.]
"Contrary to popular belief, there have been hundreds of
studies on the medical uses of cannabis since its introduction to
western medicine in the mid-nineteenth century," said NORML's
Publications Director Paul Armentano who attended NIDA's 1995
National Conference on Marijuana Use: Prevention, Treatment, and
Research. He noted that the subject of medical marijuana
was effectively "swept under the rug" during that
forum. "NIDA had the opportunity to address this
pressing issue in 1995, but opted to all but ignore the issue,
allotting less than one half-hour for its discussion,"
Armentano explained.
"The literature [in support of medical marijuana] has been
there a long time," Dr. Laurens White, a cancer specialist
in San Francisco, told the New York Times. "There is
enough anecdotal evidence and papers to say that medically, there
isn't any evidence of harm and that there is evidence of
benefit."
For more information, please call Allen St. Pierre of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500 or Dave Fratello of Americans for Medical Rights
@ (202) 537-5005. Copies of NORML's
position paper: Making The Case For Medical Marijuana, are
available upon request or on-line at NORML's
website at: http://www.norml.org.
(Meanwhile) Senators Introduce Anti-Medical Marijuana Bill In Congress
February 13, 1996, Washington, D.C.:
Rep. Lauch Faircloth (R-N.C.) has introduced legislation in
Congress (S. 40) to severely sanction physicians who recommend
the medical use of marijuana to seriously ill patients. The
measure appears to be a direct response to the November passage
of a California ballot initiative granting an affirmative medical
defense under state law for patients who use marijuana
medicinally with the recommendation of their physician. The
California proposition also states that, "Physicians shall
not be punished or denied any right or privilege for recommending
marijuana to a patient for medical purposes.
Federal law already forbids doctors from prescribing marijuana.
"This legislation represents the most extreme position of
those who oppose the medical use of marijuana -- arresting and
jailing physicians," said NORML's Executive
Director R. Keith Stroup. He noted that doctors who
recommend marijuana to a patient under 21 years of age may be
sentenced to up to eight years in prison and/or fined $60,000
under the provisions of the bill. Other penalties include
revoking physicians' ability to write prescriptions and excluding
doctors from participation in Medicare and state health care
programs.
The proposed legislation states that, "A practitioner will
be deemed to have 'recommended' the use of marihuana if the
practitioner offered advice, or responded to a request for
advice, suggesting the use of marihuana while acting in the
course of his or her professional capacity."
Graham Boyd, an attorney from California who is representing a
group of physicians and patients that have filed a class action
suit against the federal government for its issuance of similar
threats against doctors who recommend marijuana, calls such
restrictions illegal. "The Supreme Court has said that
the government may not bar physicians from discussing
contraception or abortion, both controversial topics in their
day," he stated in a January 15 press release.
"By the same logic, federal officials may not use
controversy over marijuana as an excuse to intrude on the
sanctity of the physician-patient relationship."
Sens. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) and James Inhofe (R-Okla.) are
co-sponsoring the legislation, entitled the "Drug Use
Prevention Act of 1997." The measure has been referred
to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
For more information, please contact R. Keith Stroup, Esq.,
of NORML @ (202)
483-5500. Copies of the legislation are available from NORML
upon request.
Drug Czar Rejects Offer To Settle Medical Marijuana Lawsuit
February 11, 1997, Washington, D.C.:
The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) repeated its
position this past Monday that doctor's in California cannot
evade federal drug laws "by claiming that they are merely
providing their patients with 'recommendations' in accordance
with their best medical judgment." The announcement
was a response to a class action suit filed in federal court by
physicians, patients, and a San Francisco prosecutor who has
AIDS, seeking an injunction to prevent federal officials from
taking any punitive action against physicians who recommend the
medical use of marijuana to their patients in compliance with
California law.
According to Associated Press, plaintiffs offered to
settle the federal case if the government would agree to bar
prosecution of doctors who, in good faith, discuss the use of
medical marijuana or recommend it for their patients.
"It's a straight-forward First Amendment case," said
Graham Boyd, an attorney for the plaintiffs. "The
First Amendment protects the rights of doctors and patients to
talk about the full range of medical treatment, and the feds have
no basis for interfering with that statement."
Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey said that he will reconsider his view
of medical marijuana if health professionals determine it is
effective, during a speech at the John F. Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard University last evening.
For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre of NORML
@ (202) 483-5500 or Bill Zimmerman of Americans for Medical
Rights @ (310) 394-2952.
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