Pubdate: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer (WA) Copyright: 2002 Seattle Post-Intelligencer Contact: http://www.seattle-pi.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/408 Author: Jeanne Kohl-Welles, State Senator Note: Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle, represents the 36th District in the state Senate. WHERE'S BUSH'S COMPASSION FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA USERS? Along with 18 members of the Legislature, I have joined a national coalition of hundreds of state legislators, physicians, religious leaders, medical organizations -- and such notables as Walter Cronkite, Hugh Downs and Milton Friedman -- to ask President Bush to allow seriously ill patients to have legal access to medical marijuana under federal law. This coalition published its request to the president in the form of a full-page ad in The New York Times on March 6. Bush, who campaigned as a "compassionate conservative," said during the 2000 campaign that states should be able to decide the medical marijuana issue "as they so choose." But his administration has pursued a different course, allowing the Drug Enforcement Administration to raid medical marijuana providers in California, where voters approved medical use of marijuana in 1996. Such a policy is inhumane and unnecessary. In 1978, the federal government created a program through which patients with serious medical conditions could receive a government-grown supply of marijuana. The Compassionate Investigational New Drug (IND) program was set up as a research program, so that each patient's physician could study the effects of marijuana on a particular medical condition. For the seven patients who are still in the program, marijuana remains an effective drug. Glaucoma patients have successfully prevented their vision from deteriorating further, and those with crippling neurological conditions have found pain relief that is enabling them to lead functional lives. In the early 1990s, however, a flood of applications from AIDS patients threatened to expand the Compassionate IND program into a much larger program that would have undercut the first Bush administration's insistence that there is no acceptable use for marijuana. As a result, in 1991 the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services closed the Compassionate IND program to all new applicants, even though the patients who were already in the program were clearly benefiting. Three years ago, at the request of the White House drug czar's office, the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine (IOM) examined all available research on the medical uses of marijuana. As IOM principal investigator Dr. John Benson explained, the institute found that "there are some limited circumstances in which we recommend smoking marijuana for medical uses." In its landmark report, the IOM suggested that a program similar to the Compassionate IND program might be the best way to remove the threat of arrest for patients suffering chronic conditions such as severe pain or AIDS wasting syndrome, while at the same time gathering additional data on marijuana's therapeutic uses. What we are asking of the president isn't radical. It represents the consensus of leading scientists and health organizations, such as the American Public Health Association and the American Preventive Health Association. Our effort has brought together people from all shades of the political spectrum, from Alan Dershowitz and former Surgeon General Dr. Joycelyn Elders to such noted conservatives as Lyn Nofziger, a trusted adviser to former Presidents Reagan and Nixon. It also has the overwhelming support of the public. In every state, including Washington, where voters have had the opportunity, they have chosen to allow seriously ill people to use medical marijuana without fear of arrest. Poll after poll has shown strong levels of public approval. Other nations are already moving in this direction. The Canadian government already has given 1,000 patients legal permission to use medical marijuana, and has hired a private firm to grow marijuana for these patients. All we ask of the president is simple compassion and common sense. The administration should implement the Institute of Medicine's recommendations, which would provide desperately needed relief to seriously ill people while giving policy- makers the data we need to formulate a longer-term policy. Marijuana's use for medical purposes is already recognized under Washington state law, following voter approval of Initiative 692 in 1998. It is time that patients received similar protection under federal law. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek