Pubdate: Mon, 21 May 2001 Source: Citizen, The (NH) Copyright: 2001, Geo. J. Foster Co. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1408 Website: http://www.citizen.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) MAN LAMENTS MARIJUANA RULING LITCHFIELD - A U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said the medical use of marijuana is not legal - even in states with laws that say it is - has dashed the hopes one New Hampshire man who relies on the drug. Robert, who told his story to the Boston Sunday Globe but asked that his last name not be used, had hoped a federal ruling would pave the way for him to get easier access to the marijuana he says he needs. But the high court last week ruled there was no proof that smoking marijuana provided any medical benefits. Robert said he knows different. Robert was diagnosed eight years ago with an inoperable brain tumor. At the time, he did not smoke marijuana. The tumor caused Robert repeated seizures. In 1995 and again in 1997, he had surgery to remove much of the tumor, but that didn't stop the seizures. The tumor also damaged his optic nerve, leaving him legally blind. Doctors prescribed him anti-seizure drugs, but they did not work. Then last summer Robert underwent chemotherapy in another attempt to shrink the tumor. He also was prescribed Marinol, which contains the active ingredient in marijuana. "I was delighted to discover that I was not having as many seizures," he recently told a House committee considering a bill to legalize medical marijuana in New Hampshire. The bill did not pass. "Rather than six or more a day, I was having only six a week." That sent Robert out to research the use of marijuana. He learned that some doctors were using Marinol and marijuana to control seizures. "And then one day when I was feeling severe pain and nausea, I had the opportunity to take a few puffs from a marijuana cigarette, and immediately the pain, fatigue and ill feeling lifted away," he said. "I actually went outside and did yard work. I was so amazed." Robert spoke to his doctors about smoking marijuana. They warned him about possible dangers, but he continued anyway. He said the seizures stopped, and the pain and illness from the chemotherapy were gone. But marijuana is not legal, and that makes it a challenge for Robert to get the drug. "One of the reasons cited for the New Hampshire bill's failure was because marijuana use was banned on a federal level," he said. "If the federal case had passed, it would have been easier for us to get a law passed here." Several states, including Maine and California, have passed laws making medical use of marijuana legal. Robert said he tried growing the drug himself, but had no luck. And he doesn't like buying it on the street. "Sometimes a compassionate person just leaves it on my front door," he said. But Enfield police Chief John Giese, who spoke against the New Hampshire bill on behalf of the New Hampshire Chiefs of Police, said people pushing for medical legalization often want it approved for general use, too. "We call them legalizers," he said. "Listen, you've got the American Cancer Society and the American Medical Association all saying that marijuana is not useful as a medicine... "I say the real answer here is to put this before the Federal Drug Administration ," he said. "Let them decide." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk