Pubdate: Mon, 01 Aug 2005
Source: Times, The (UK)
Copyright: 2005 Times Newspapers Ltd
Contact:  http://www.the-times.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/454
Author: David Rowan
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?207 (Cannabis - United Kingdom)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)

THIS MORALLY DUBIOUS BAN ON MEDICINAL CANNABIS IS SENTENCING PATIENTS TO A 
LIFE IN AGONY

HOW SHAMEFULLY callous is the Government's policy on medicinal cannabis 
use? Just ask Pauline Taylor, a former Macmillan nurse who for 20 years has 
suffered increasingly debilitating pain from multiple sclerosis. Seven 
months ago the 53-year-old wheelchair user from Durham discovered an 
unapproved medication which, as she movingly recounts, "has finally given 
me my legs back". Too bad for Ms Taylor, then, that her agony-deadening 
"magic medicine" last week became the latest officially sanctioned target 
in a renewed legal assault on cannabis-based pain relief. After all, as the 
Home Office coldly points out, the law must be enforced.

A number of volunteer networks dedicated to supplying vulnerable patients 
with medicinal cannabis have attracted unusually close attention from the 
police. Most recently, it was the turn of Ms Taylor's suppliers, a 
five-year-old non-profit group based in Cumbria that enhances home-made 
chocolate bars with 2 per cent by weight of donated cannabis. Around a 
hundred "cannachoc" bars have until recently found their way across Britain 
each week, sent on medical proof that the recipient had MS.

Cumbrian police and the Home Office have known about the operation for 
years, but only now -- 1,600 clients later -- have the authorities decided 
to act. Last week three of those involved were charged with conspiracy to 
supply a controlled drug, an offence that carries a possible 14-year prison 
sentence. The timing suggests a pungent whiff of political interference.

Certainly, there remains considerable medical concern about cannabis; pot 
smoking has been strongly linked with an increased risk of schizophrenia, 
psychosis, depression and other mental disorders. The British Medical 
Association insists that raw cannabis is not a "suitable medicinal 
product", despite the "anecdotal" claims of its efficacy. Unscientific, 
personal accounts they may be -- yet among Britain's estimated 85,000 MS 
sufferers, many who in desperation have tried cannabis to relieve their 
symptoms perceive a clear, life-enhancing benefit.

Even the most coldhearted policy-maker would be moved by some of the 
tearfully grateful letters received by the chocolate supplier, which calls 
itself Therapeutic Help from Cannabis for Multiple Sclerosis. "Dear 
whoever," writes an elderly woman in Wokingham. "Thank you so much for my 
first supply of cannachoc. It is wonderful. For the first time in many, 
many months I do not have 'jerking' legs in the evenings and can sit still 
and watch TV."

 From Essex, an elderly woman says that she can finally get to sleep again, 
the physical pain having temporarily subsided, "and I don't feel any 
high-ness at all". As Ms Taylor sees it, the Home Office bureaucrats whom 
she suspects of ordering her supply chain broken have clearly never 
experienced chronic, total body pain. "I'd like Charles Clarke to have my 
MS for 24 hours and see how he'd feel," she says. "He has no goddam right 
to tell me what I can put into my body."

The Home Secretary does seem to be on an extraordinarily ill-conceived 
trip. The new hard line on suppliers of medicinal cannabis echoes a wider 
unease within government at last year's reclassification of the drug by 
David Blunkett. Before the general election the Prime Minister suggested 
that cannabis "isn't quite as harmless as people make out", and Mr Clarke 
wrote to the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs demanding that it 
re-examine the reclassification in view of new health concerns. Could this 
current assault on medicinal use -- backed by a recent Court of Appeal 
ruling that users have no defence of "necessity" in relieving their pain -- 
be a deliberate attempt to distance Mr Clarke from his predecessor's more 
licentious era, when the spliff became as morally tolerable as the 
impregnation of another man's wife?

Nothing of the sort, insists the Home Office. Any decision to bring charges 
is a matter for the Crown Prosecution Service. The CPS, in turn, says it 
would act only after receiving a file from the police, and that on no 
account would there be a political decision to prosecute. Because cannabis 
remains illegal, that decision would rest simply on the quality of evidence 
and whether it would be "in the public interest".

Forget passing the joint: this is passing the buck until any logic fades 
into an embarrassing blur. For all the "public interest" in breaking up 
these altruistic if unauthorised networks, the practical consequence of 
prosecution will be simply to send the "clients" -- typically elderly, 
middle-class, otherwise law-abiding citizens -- to criminal dealers. Or, 
alternatively, to lead them to suffer in silence until an "official" 
cannabis-based medicine is approved for use. Based on recent experience, 
they could be waiting some time.

This has always been the favoured get-out clause, from the Health 
Department to the Home Office. Because users of raw cannabis risk addiction 
and chronic health effects, ministers point out, only a properly tested 
medical preparation can be allowed. All that is needed is the approval of 
the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

So where is the MHRA's approval for the most promising cannabis-based 
medication under development, a mouth spray extensively tested by the 
British company GW Pharmaceuticals? In April, Canada gave the spray formal 
approval. It was expected to gain its UK licence long before now -- but, 
well, the MHRA just needs a few more test results before it can be 
absolutely certain.

Bureaucracies, by their nature, favour delays over decision-making. People, 
on the other hand, feel the intense, life-shattering pain of disease very 
much in the here and now. Those unfortunate enough to have MS -- or Aids, 
arthritis and any other severe condition where cannabis may alleviate 
symptoms -- should surely be allowed to bear the risk of side effects and 
possible long-term damage in exchange for the pain control that cannabis 
might bring.

Until a legal medicine is made available, how can it make moral sense for 
the authorities to target the well-intentioned volunteers offering a 
short-term alternative?
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MAP posted-by: Beth