Pubdate: Fri, 11 Jul 2003 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: David Howell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) PRESCRIBING POT COULD LEAD TO BREAK-INS, DOCTOR SAYS Medicinal Value Of Marijuana Questioned EDMONTON - Dr. Steve Chambers has no plans to help patients obtain medical marijuana, despite the fact that physicians will prescribe and distribute the drug under new federal rules. Marijuana's medical benefits have not been scientifically proven, and the Edmonton family physician said the idea of dispensing it causes him grave concerns. "I just would not be comfortable in dispensing at all," Chambers said. "There would be safety issues in my office. We've had break-ins for morphine, and armed robberies even, just to steal the prescription blanks for triplicate prescriptions. "So if we have a marked, labelled package that is obviously going to be containing 30 grams of marijuana, I would imagine that would make that physician's office a likely target for illicit activity." Health Minister Anne McLellan this week announced an interim policy for the distribution of marijuana to Canadians who are authorized to use it to treat multiple sclerosis and other conditions. Dried pot from a Manitoba lab will be shipped in 30-gram packages to the patient's physician, who will dispense it. Chambers, also president of the Alberta Medical Association, questioned why doctors would be put in charge of distribution when pharmacists dispense all other prescribed medications. "And the idea that we should be dispensing something that has the potential for harm, I don't see that as being something that a physician would want to do," he said. "As an ethical physician, I cannot treat this drug differently than other unproven experimental drugs that I would not prescribe to a patient." In the two years since Health Canada first approved the use of medicinal pot, several patients have asked Chambers to help them get access to it. "In every case, I have declined to fill out application forms to apply for medicinal marijuana because I have not seen the evidence that it would help their condition." Chambers advised AMA members by letter Thursday to consider "ethical issues, legal liability and office security" when deciding whether or not to prescribe and distribute marijuana. The Canadian Medical Association also warns that doctors who dispense pot "do so at their professional and legal peril." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom