Pubdate: Wed, 11 Apr 2001 Source: Janesville Gazette (WI) Copyright: 2001 Bliss Communications, Inc Contact: http://www.gazetteextra.com/lettereditor.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1356 Website: http://www.gazetteextra.com/ Author: Sarah Wyatt/Associated Press COMMITTEE HOLDS HEARING ON BENEFITS OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA MADISON--Jacki Rickert says she is tired of risking arrest every time she smokes marijuana to treat the pain and loss of appetite caused by a tissue disorder and degenerative bone marrow disease. Rickert testified Tuesday before the Assembly State Affairs Committee, which held a hearing to gather information on the merits and pitfalls of medical marijuana, Committee chairman Rep. Rick Skindrud, R-Mount Horeb, said. Rickert, executive director of the group "Is My Medicine Legal Yet?" testified that marijuana has been more helpful than any of the other drugs she has tried, including morphine. Rickert of Mondovi said her weight dropped down to 68 pounds and cannabis - -- or marijuana -- has been the only drug that has been substantially effective in increasing her weight. She said it allows her to take half the amount of drugs she would otherwise. "You have a few puffs, when it works, you put it out. That's not something you can do with a pill, that's not something you can do with a liquid," she said. "I don't sit down and get high or anything that everyone talks about. I do this to have an appetite, to be able to have a quality of life." Dr. Michael Miller, president of the Dane County Medical Society, said there is not sufficient medical evidence showing that smoked marijuana is effective in treating the symptoms of various diseases. Legalizing smoked marijuana could be a detriment to society by making more people addicted to the drug, he said. "Medical marijuana is an oxymoron," he said. "Smoked marijuana is not medicine. ... Wait until the science catches up." The State Medical Society is now opposed to any bills that would legalize smoked marijuana, Miller said. The Wisconsin Nurses Association supports legalized marijuana but has not specified how it is best used -- taken orally as a pill, inhaled using an inhaler, or smoked, said association president Gina Dennik-Champion. Rep. Frank Boyle, D-Superior, said he is in the process of drafting a bill modeled after Hawaii's legalized marijuana law, which gives doctors the authority to give patients registration certificates to use marijuana to ease pain caused by debilitating diseases such as cancer and AIDS. Dane County Sheriff Gary Hamblin said law enforcement should defer to the medical community to evaluate and conduct reliable, significant research about whether marijuana has medicinal effects. While law enforcement officials do not want laws that will make their jobs more difficult, Hamblin said they are "not oblivious to the need for pharmaceutical relief for those who are in pain and suffering." Boyle said the reason there isn't enough research is that it is illegal to grow marijuana, so the University of Wisconsin Medical School and other research facilities have been legally barred from conducting research. California passed one of the nation's first medical marijuana laws in 1996, but it has been held up by a court fight. Voters in Arizona, Alaska, Colorado, Maine, Nevada, Oregon and Washington also have approved ballot initiatives allowing the use of medical marijuana. The Hawaii law was passed by the Legislature and signed by the governor last year. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom