Pubdate: Fri, 06 Oct 2006 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2006 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Jeffrey Simpson, Staff Reporter OSTEOARTHRITIS SUFFERER UPSET BY POT FUNDING CUT AHalifax woman is worried the federal government's decision to scrap funding for medical marijuana research will make her a criminal. Corrie Watt, 59, says she has been using marijuana for six months as part of a clinical trial to alleviate the excruciating neurological pain she suffers due to osteoarthritis. But she has been told funding for the program will end after the current fiscal year, leaving her scrambling to find another source. "I'm going to apply for a medical marijuana licence," she said in an interview. "If I don't get it, I'll find my own way. "I live in a university neighbourhood. It's not hard to get hold of." She obtained a permit to use medical marijuana legally as one of about 1,400 people with Cannabis for the Management of Pain: Assessment of Safety Study (COMPASS). She gets ground-up herb from a hospital and mixes it with yogurt to eat, although other people smoke it or make tea with it. Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government announced Sept. 25 that it is cutting funds to medical marijuana research as part of $1 billion in budgetary belt-tightening. COMPASS has told her she'll be excluded from the study and her permit will no longer be valid. "I'm very concerned about that," Ms. Watt said. "I didn't want to go on it illegally." She said she used other painkillers for years but they either didn't work very well or the side-effects became unbearable. She suffered extreme nausea and lack of short-term memory. Within two weeks of starting to use marijuana, she stopped taking her other pain medication. She said she's now cognizant enough to study Mandarin and live an ordinary life. "I could not do this last year," she said. Ms. Watt doesn't believe pharmaceutical companies will fill the void because it would be difficult for them to make money from an illegal substance. "Who else but the government can fund something like this?" she asked. She suspects the Harper government's decision to scrap the expenditure is for moral reasons linked to marijuana's recreational use. "It's not to save money," she said. "I suspect that the government can't really deal with the implication should this study come out. That would be embarrassing." Jason Bouzanis, a spokesman for Health Canada, said the funding for medical marijuana, which amounted to $4 million over two years, was cut to refocus government spending and pay down the national debt. The funding for COMPASS was part of a five-year federal grant program that ended in March. Only $2 million of $7.5 million in available funding was used because only two studies met government criteria, Mr. Bouzanis said. "It's important to note that people who are authorized by the Government of Canada to use marijuana for medical purposes - that program has not been affected," he said. "It's simply the medical marijuana research program that was affected by the announced cuts." - --- MAP posted-by: Jim