Pubdate: Fri, 03 Aug 2001 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2001 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Alexandra Paul, with files from Canadian Press and the Globe and Mail Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) ROCK'S GARDEN GOING TO POT? Few MDs Willing To Prescribe Marijuana ALTHOUGH an old Manitoba copper mine has become Canada's first legal marijuana garden, patients craving a toke will have better luck scrounging it on the street than getting doctors to prescribe it. Yesterday, few doctors canvassed in a dozen medical clinics, walk-ins and private offices -- including specialists and family doctors -- would even take calls on medical marijuana, let alone write a prescription. At the same time, federal Health Minister Allan Rock was plunging down a mine shaft in Flin Flon for a tour of the first and only government-regulated marijuana farm. Security is so tight that the mine has a security restriction higher than Winnipeg's federal microbiology lab, where deadly viruses like Ebola are handled. The blinding glare of powerful grow lights, a heavy musky aroma and a forest of fecund flowering plants greeted Rock, who made the tour with only a handful of reporters. "It's an incredible experience to see this operation," he said. The subterranean gardeners -- under contract with Saskatoon berry farmers Prairie Plant Systems -- held a brief ceremony for the health minister, unveiling a plaque dubbing the $5.7 million area the Rock Garden. But critics and advocates alike say it's going take more than ink about a politician's visit to quell criticism of regulations for the medical use of marijuana. Critics say the rules are not only too restrictive, but the mine won't produce enough pot to meet demand and it won't be strong enough for people suffering from AIDS, arthritis, neurological disorders such as multiple sclerosis or glaucoma, and terminal cancer. Patients must be very sick or dying for doctors to vouch for them in order to win a photo ID permit from Health Canada to consume or grow marijuana. Fewer than 300 such licences to consume pot have been granted. Doctors are lining up coast to coast to oppose being named as gatekeepers to the controlled substance. They don't want any part of it -- particularly one fuzzy federal category called "reasonable use". In addition to terminally ill or very sick patients being allowed access to marijuana, there is a third category under federal regulation for "anything else that is reasonable," said Dr. Bill Pope, registrar of Manitoba's College of Physicians and Surgeons. "We've had difficulty with that, because it's so nebulous. It's very unclear and that's the real problem. The legislation is so poorly defined," Pope said. The Canadian Medical Association has also raised strong objections, saying regulations ignore normal protocols of rigorous clinical trials, putting patients and doctors in a precarious position over a controlled drug with no proof it is safe or effective. Doctors argue they will have to fend off a steady stream of addicts beating a path to their doors. The college is taking calls from doctors anxious to avoid dust-ups over their role as legal pushers. "And it's only since yesterday that it's been legal," said Pope, who fields the anxious queries. In one case, a patient walked into a Winnipeg doctor's office angrily demanding a prescription that the doctor refused. "Physicians are the ones who must prescribe it and they are the ones who are required (to do paperwork for federal officials) to approve who grows it. "The wording of the legislation puts physicians in a Catch-22 . . .if the (health) minister has concerns he can complain directly to the provincial colleges," Pope said. "That's not likely to encourage physicians to give it a try. Most physicians would rather have little contact with the disciplinary side of their regulatory body," Pope said wryly. Rock said yesterday when a government launches a groundbreaking policy there are bound to be problems. "I don't pretend they are perfect. We can adapt and adjust these regulations to overcome problems that arise," Rock said. One University of Manitoba law professor said making pot legal for medical reasons is a good first step, although the way the government is regulating it is all wrong. Barney Sneiderman said he can't see the sense in setting up a Fort Knox government farm for home-grown pot, not when regulations allow for individuals to grow their own or get it from someone else with a permit to grow it. The other question is whether the quality of the pot is potent enough or too potent for patients who don't like feeling stoned. The Flin Flon crop is grown from mixed seeds culled from RCMP drug seizures. That's also a concern for doctors, who don't know how they are to judge doses or grades of pot. Advocates of decriminalizing marijuana, like Sneiderman, and doctors part company on the plant's medicinal value. "This is so ridiculous," Sneiderman said. "The fact is, there are people who could benefit from it and with all the evidence even though it is anecdotal, you'd think doctors would be eager to prescribe it." He even admits procuring it once for a man dying of AIDS. "You can headline that: Law professor admits being a narcotic trafficker and is proud of it!' " Sneiderman said, recounting the tale of finding a dealer to buy an ounce of pot. "Legally, I committed a crime. Morally, I felt good about it. I did a good deed." The Rock Garden has garnered international headlines and prompted some groups to hold Canada's policy up as an example of compassion that other governments should follow. In the United States, where a person can be sent to jail for as much as a year for possession of a joint and five years for growing a plant, pro-marijuana lobby groups praised Ottawa. Rock said he isn't worried Canada's liberal medicinal marijuana policy might draw the wrath of President George W. Bush's administration. Canada is lagging behind the lead set by countries like Portugal, Spain, Italy, Belgium and Switzerland with far more liberal drug laws. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake