Pubdate: Sat, 15 Sep 2001
Source: Duncan News Leader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2001 Duncan News Leader
Contact:  http://www.duncannewsleader.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314
Author: Tom MacDougall
Note: Tom MacDougall is the assistant editor of the News Leader's sister
paper, the Parksville Qualicm Beach News.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

POLITICS, NOT HEALTH BEHIND POT POLICY DETAILS

The federal Department of Health's new legislation on the medical use of 
marijuana is an interesting study in contradictions.

On one hand, it supposedly makes it easier for Canadians suffering from 
chronic pain or debilitating illness to gain access to a drug that can 
potentially improve their quality of life. On the other, however, it fails 
to set out any guidelines as to where the average patient - who in all 
likelihood has no concept of how to grow B.C.'s most controversial export 
crop - can get a clean, consistent supply of the medication.

Nor does it necessarily make it easier to legally possess the wacky weed. 
Consider the process:

First, an applicant must supply their full name, date of birth and gender, 
as well as a complete address, along with an indication of whether the 
applicant intends to grow their own or buy from a licensed dealer.

Next, the applicant has to obtain a medical declaration, which includes the 
doctor's full name, address and telephone number. The medical declaration 
has to outline the applicant's medical condition, what category the 
condition falls under, the dosage of marijuana (in grams) recommended and 
how it is to be "administered". Further, it has to assure all other drugs 
have been tried or considered.

You follow that up with photo ID with picture restrictions reminiscent of 
passport photos (at least 43x54 mm but not more than 50x70 mm and shot 
against a plain contrasting background). It then has to be certified by the 
medical practitioner treating the applicant as an accurate representation 
of the patient.

There's also a little math that needs to be done to determine the monthly 
allotment of marijuana any patient can have at any given time. And oh, by 
the way, if your application is approved, your licence expires in a year 
and you have to provide a majority of the information again. It would be 
easier to get a rolling prescription for morphine. Small wonder people like 
Mark Russell are starting buyers' clubs.

The jury is out on the medical benefits of marijuana. Formal scientific 
studies seem to be few and far between, and those that are out there 
provide results the government says are generally inconclusive. Anecdotal 
support is strong and easy to come by, but the scientific community is 
loath to accept what is views as non-empirical data.

The government holds that lack of scientific data out as the reason the new 
legislation is so restrictive. They need time to study marijuana and its 
medicinal effects further, they say; to gather further input from the 
medical community. But the lack of conclusive evidence hasn't stopped 
doctors from talking about the positive health effects of a glass of red wine.

The truth is likely less about science and more about politics. Marijuana 
and the war on drugs are political hot potatoes. No one wants to make a 
firm decision. But that's what government is supposed to do. Not in this 
case. Government, instead of discussions of health, has opted for political 
policies.
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MAP posted-by: Jackl