Pubdate: Sun, 10 Sep 2000 Source: Denver Rocky Mountain News (CO) Copyright: 2000 Denver Publishing Co. Contact: 400 W. Colfax, Denver, CO 80204 Website: http://www.denver-rmn.com/ Author: Vincent Carroll, editorial page editor MARIJUANA BACKERS DON'T MAKE IT EASY There are roughly 10,000 doctors practicing medicine in Colorado, yet not one is riding into battle beside sponsors of the medical marijuana initiative. Not one. There were no doctors publicly allied with Coloradans for Medical Rights in 1998, when Amendment 20 initially made the ballot (and was illegally thrown off by the secretary of state), and there were still no doctors on board last week when I checked with the sponsors again. What gives? You can find maverick doctors willing to put in a good word for virtually any exotic nostrum on the market. We've seen them plugging unorthodox diet books that ought to be plastered with consumer warning labels. And yet when it comes to Amendment 20, the mavericks have fled the scene. No one rises to contradict the medical establishment. No one steps forward, links arms with the initiative's sponsors, and tells us why we need to decriminalize marijuana for use by patients in pain. If there were a groundswell of Coloradans demanding marijuana as the only way to relieve their agony, wouldn't you think some doctors would rally to their cause? It makes you wonder whose agenda this amendment is meant to serve: doctors' and patients', or the wealthy supporters of drug legalization who've bankrolled this and similar ballot measures across the land. Another worry: the amendment's definition of who would qualify to use marijuana. No, not just those afflicted with AIDS, cancer or other specific, devastating conditions, but anyone claiming to suffer from severe and chronic pain. Now, I'm someone who does believe that doctors and desperate patients should be able to choose the pain and nausea treatment they like, however outside mainstream medical practice. That's why deciding how to vote on Amendment 20 will be such a challenge for me. There's no question that the ''cannabinoid drugs'' in marijuana (THC is the best known, but there are others) can relieve pain, stimulate appetite and suppress nausea. And there is also no question that at least a few patients insist that marijuana gives them more effective, immediate relief than the legal synthetic alternatives that work best for everyone else. Even a 1999 study by the Institute for Medicine conducted at the request of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy acknowledged that ''until a nonsmoked, rapid-onset cannabinoid drug delivery system becomes available," there "is no clear alternative" to marijuana use in some instances. To be sure, the researchers who conducted that study went to great pains to stress ''the future of cannabinoid drugs lies not in smoked marijuana but in chemically-defined drugs'' and that ''because of the health risk associated with smoking, smoked marijuana should generally not be recommended for long-term medical use.'' Yet under Amendment 20, a patient could smoke marijuana as a long-term treatment through repeated renewals of a one-year registry card. With broader professional support and a better crafted amendment, Coloradans for Medical Rights could have made voting easy for those of us who sympathize with the principle behind their cause. Instead, they chose to make it hard. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens