Pubdate: Thu, 31 Oct 2002
Source: Reno News & Review (NV)
Copyright: 2002, Chico Community Publishing, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.newsreview.com/issues/reno/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2524
Author: Dennis Myers
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?162 (Nevadans for Responsible Law 
Enforcement)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?163 (Question 9 (NV))

WONDER DRUG COVER-UP

We've heard it repeatedly. It's the mantra of prosecutors, police officers 
and federal drug officials: There's no scientific evidence that marijuana 
is medicine.

In D. Brian Burghart's News & Review article on ballot Question 9, Burghart 
reported that number one on law enforcement's list of reasons for opposing 
marijuana use was, "No one, not the American Medical Association or the 
courts, has scientifically proven pot has medicinal benefits." The 
distinguished physician Dr. Richard Gammick, Washoe County's district 
attorney, once said, "They would have to prove this is a medically 
necessary drug ... "

Well, no, they wouldn't. They already have. Not once, not twice, not a 
hundred times, but thousands of times. That's how many studies of medical 
marijuana are available. Marijuana is not a new medicine--"marijuana was 
being used therapeutically by mankind 2,000 years before the birth of 
Christ," Drug Enforcement Administration judge Francis Young ruled in 
1988--so it's been studied for almost that long. Migraine, cholera, 
tetanus, grand mal seizures, muscle spasm, even rabies--if there's a 
malady, there's probably a scientific study of marijuana's use in treating it.

That's why migraine specialist Ethan Russo says, "Cannabis is the most 
useful plant on earth." And the no-scientific-evidence canard has been 
discredited so often we must assume those who still use it now know it's false.

Don't believe me. Here's a handy-dandy guide for checking it yourself. 
There's a medical library at the University of Nevada, Reno. Drive north on 
Virginia Street. Two streets past the planetarium turn right on 17th 
Street. Drive past KNPB and stop at the Pennington Building. Walk inside to 
the medical library. Ask to see the Journal of the American Medical 
Association for Oct. 20, 1975. On page 306, you'll find a study of the 
value of marijuana in controlling epileptic convulsions. If you don't trust 
just one source, look at the end of the article and you'll find 11 
footnotes listing other studies of the plant's use in maladies from cholera 
to epilepsy. You can find many of the footnoted studies in the medical 
library and each study will have still more footnotes to still more studies.

After you've read the JAMA article, you might then ask for the Journal of 
Neurology, Volume 236. On page 120, you'll find a 1989 study, "Effect of 
Cannabinoids on Spasticity and Ataxia in Multiple Sclerosis." It footnotes 
21 additional studies.

Then ask for two issues of the New England Journal of Medicine--Sept. 7, 
1995, and Jan. 17, 1980. On page 135 of the 1980 issue, you'll find 
"Antiemetics in patients receiving chemotherapy for cancer."

It has 12 footnotes to other studies. On pages 670 and 671 of the 1995 
issue, you'll find two letters from physicians describing the benefits of 
marijuana as an appetite remedy for wasting disease and describing the 
opposition of law enforcement even to the study of medical marijuana.

Then, the next time you hear Dr. Gammick or one of his colleagues say there 
is no scientific proof of the medical benefits of marijuana, give them a 
call and ask them why they're saying it.
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens