Pubdate: Wed, 05 Apr 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Greg Smith, Associated Press Writer

IOWA HOLDS MEDICAL MARIJUANA MEETING

IOWA CITY, Iowa - Under the Compassionate Care Program, multiple sclerosis 
patient Barbara Douglass was one of 15 people in the country who was chosen 
to receive medical marijuana.

The federal program was discontinued in 1992, but the pain Douglass feels 
in her back and legs hasn't stopped. Neither has her use of marijuana.

"When the leg is just killing you, you rub it and rub it. Sometimes you rub 
it so much and so hard you can bruise yourself," said Douglass, who 
developed MS in 1988.

"The marijuana helps. It eases the pain and spasms. I believe smoking 
marijuana helps me deal with the disease that I'm forced to deal with."

Douglass, 43, carries a letter from her doctor stating that she 
participated in the program and may continue using marijuana.

She'll have that letter with her Thursday when she travels to the 
University of Iowa for a three-day conference on the therapeutic use of 
marijuana.

Billed as the first of its kind, organizers say the conference is being 
held in response to a report last year by the Institute of Medicine. A 
report by the federal advisory panel said marijuana can help fight pain and 
nausea and should be tested further in scientific trials.

"If there can be some enlightenment, that would be wonderful," said Melanie 
Dreher, dean of Iowa's College of Nursing and a former board member of the 
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

"I think that people need to know the whole picture of marijuana. That, in 
fact, it's not just a recreational drug but has medicinal value."

It is against federal law for doctors to prescribe the drug. Yet voters in 
Alaska, Washington, California, Arizona, Nevada, Oregon, Maine and the 
District of Columbia have approved laws allowing doctors to recommend 
marijuana use by patients suffering from cancer, glaucoma and other conditions.

The Justice Department is challenging those laws.

Al Byrne Jr., cofounder of a group called Patients Out of Time, which asked 
Iowa to hold the conference, said the government has to fight the laws 
because "if they give up their control and pass that control to the health 
care community, then they're out of a job."

Byrne says he smoked marijuana to relieve eye pressure from glaucoma. He 
said his father also smoked it in the late 1960s -under advice from his 
doctor -to relieve nausea and pain from liver cancer. He said his dad 
bought the drug illegally off the street.

Douglass said she gets upset when asked if she gets high as a result of 
smoking marijuana.

"Just think about it. There you are, you've got this disease and you need 
something to relieve the pain. That's certainly not going to be a high," 
she said. "We're a different group of people than those who smoke it for a 
high."
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