Pubdate: Tue, 31 Jul 2001 Source: Daily Herald Tribune, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Herald Tribune Contact: http://www.bowesnet.com/dht/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/804 Author: Deb Guerette, Herald-Tribune Staff NO EASY POT PRESCRIPTIONS: LOCAL MDS Mistahia Health Region doctors aren't ready to roll out medical marijuana prescriptions with ease, despite new federal access rules implemented Monday. Doctors have concerns about using marijuana medically and the new access rules leaves them in a "precarious" position when patients begin to seek it, Mistahia medical director Dr. Herb Janzen said. "It is a very real problem and it needs to be taken seriously. It does put doctors in a precarious or untenable position," Janzen said Monday. "The public can come and say I believe this will help with this condition... but there are no guidelines. How much is useful? What is the dosage? None of that is established," he said. Janzen said he concurs with Alberta Medical Association president Clayne Steed's call for Health Canada minister Allan Rock to deal with those concerns. Use of marijuana for medical treatment is "not evidence-based and has not yet had any rigorous testing regarding long-term implications," Steed told the federal minister. Doctors have no clinical guidelines for when a marijuana prescription is warranted or for the appropriate dosage to use. Doctors also have no way of knowing the potency of the pot a patient may procure at different times, he said. Steed called on Alberta doctors to "thick twice before completing any forms for the use of marijuana." Northwest Medical Staff Association president Dr. Garth Campbell said he shares the concerns expressed by the AMA and supports Steed's position. The Canadian Medical Association made similar calls for Rock to deal with concerns as the new federal medical marijuana access regulations, published in draft in April and approved July 4, came into effect Monday. Janzen said dealing with patients who may be looking for a legal way to use marijuana recreationally is "not a good position to be put in. "It is not a good law. It is not well researched," he said. When patients come looking for a specific drug, particularly painkillers such as codeine, demerol or other narcotics, doctors' "index of suspicion (about why the drug is being requested) is high," Janzen said. Doctors feel prescribing marijuana is "fraught with personal liability," he said. "At the moment I wouldn't think about writing a prescription for it." The regulations govern the possession and production of marijuana for medical purposes. Two main components of the rules allow people to use it and gives them licence to grow it for themselves or other authorized individuals. Rock calls the new regulations a "compassionate measure (that) will improve the quality of life of sick Canadians, particularly those who are terminally ill." The regulations set three categories of illness marijuana can be prescribed for, which include terminal illnesses with a prognosis of death within 12 months and other serious medical conditions. Marijuana is claimed to provide symptomatic, not curative, relief of nausea with cancer and AIDS therapies. Patients say it stimulates appetite and produces weight gain. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens