Pubdate: Tue, 24 Sep 2002 Source: North County Times (CA) Contact: 2002 North County Times Website: http://www.nctimes.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1080 Author: David Kravets, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?154 (Conant vs. McCaffrey) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Note: The final paragraph mentions an appeal from doctors about losing their ability to prescribe for recommending medical marijuana FEDS APPEAL TO OVERTURN OREGON ASSISTED-SUICIDE MEASURE SAN FRANCISCO -(AP)- The federal government resumed its bid to ban Oregon doctors from helping terminally ill patients commit suicide, urging a federal appeals court Monday to strike down the only such state law in the nation. Attorney General John Ashcroft is seeking to sanction and perhaps hold Oregon doctors criminally liable if they prescribe lethal doses of medication, as allowed by the voter-approved Death With Dignity Act. "The attorney general has permissibly concluded that suicide is not a legitimate medical purpose," Justice Department attorney Jonathan H. Levy wrote in the appeal filed at the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. A federal judge in Portland, Ore., blocked the Justice Department from punishing Oregon doctors ---- such as stripping them of their ability to dispense medication if they prescribe lethal doses of medication to the terminally ill. In a sharp rebuke to Ashcroft, U.S. District Judge Robert Jones ruled in April that the Controlled Substances Act ---- the federal law declaring what drugs doctors may prescribe ---- does not give the federal government the power to say what is a legitimate medical practice. Ashcroft first declared on Nov. 6 that the federal government had such power. The government reiterated that point Monday, arguing the act "prohibits physicians from prescribing controlled substances except for legitimate medical purposes." Oregon voters first approved the state law in 1994 and overwhelmingly affirmed it in another vote three years later. The law allows terminally ill patients, given fewer than six months to live, to request a lethal dose of drugs after two doctors confirm the diagnosis and judge the patient mentally competent to make the request. Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, who is a physician, signed the law in 1998. Since then, Oregon has reported that at least 91 people have used the law to end their lives. Most suffered from cancer. "The Oregon law has proven itself over its five years of use to be careful and moderate and helpful for patients," said Barbara Combs Lee, president of Portland-based Compassion in Dying. Ashcroft's Nov. 6 directive also banned any lethal prescriptions on grounds they do not qualify as medication under the federal Controlled Substances Act. "Prescriptions of controlled substances are illicit whenever not made for a legitimate medical purpose, and the attorney general has reasonably concluded that suicide is not such a purpose," Levy wrote. Oregon Attorney General Hardy Myers challenged Ashcroft in federal court last fall. Ashcroft's directive reversed a 1998 opinion by former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno. The state argues that regulating and licensing doctors are responsibilities of state government. Myers argued that Congress intended only to prevent illegal drug trafficking by doctors under the Controlled Substances Act, and it left any decisions about medical practice up to the states. "The federal government doesn't have authority to say what is a legitimate medical purpose," said Kevin Neely, a spokesman for Myers. But an Oregon doctors group that opposes the assisted-suicide law rejects the states' rights argument. "The law works by forbidding Oregon doctors, and only Oregon doctors, from enforcing the nationwide medical ethics against assisted suicide," said Gregory Hamilton, a Portland doctor and spokesman for Oregon-based Physicians for Compassionate Care. "Virtually every medical group in the United States forbids assisted suicide as undermining the doctor-patient relationship." Oregon has about a month to respond to the appeal. The court has not said when it would hear the case. Also pending before the San Francisco circuit court is an appeal from doctors challenging Justice Department sanctions -- including losing their ability to prescribe medication -- if they recommend patients use medical marijuana. California, Oregon and six other states allow sick patients to use marijuana with a doctor's recommendation. The case is Oregon v. Ashcroft, 02-35587. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk