Pubdate: Wed, 30 May 2007 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2007 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.mercurynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Margalit Fox, New York Times Referenced: The East Bay Express article 'Witch-Hunt Victim or Shoddy Doc?' and photo http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1502/a01.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Mikuriya (Dr. Mikuriya) DR. TOD MIKURIYA, MEDICINAL MARIJUANA LEADER Dr. Tod H. Mikuriya, a California psychiatrist who was widely regarded as the grandfather of the medicinal marijuana movement in the United States, died May 20 at home in Berkeley. He was 73. The cause was complications of cancer, his family told California news organizations. Dr. Mikuriya, who helped make the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes legal in California, spent the past four decades publicly advocating its use, researching its effects and publishing articles on the subject. He was an architect of Proposition 215, the state ballot measure that in 1996 made it legal for California doctors to recommend marijuana for seriously ill patients. He was also a founder of the California Cannabis Research Medical Group and its offshoot, the Society of Cannabis Clinicians. As a result of his work, Dr. Mikuriya was considered a savior by some, a public menace by others. To his supporters, he was a physician of last resort: For years, a stream of patients with illnesses like cancer and AIDS made their way to his private practice in Berkeley. Dr. Mikuriya sometimes wrote a dozen or more recommendations for marijuana each day; at his death, he was reported to have approved the drug for nearly 9,000 patients. Elsewhere, however, Dr. Mikuriya's work found little favor. In 1996, for instance, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under President Clinton, publicly derided the doctor's medical philosophy as "the Cheech and Chong show." In 2000, the Medical Board of California accused Dr. Mikuriya of gross negligence, unprofessional conduct and incompetence for failing to conduct proper physical examinations on 16 patients for whom he had recommended marijuana. In 2004, the board gave him five years' probation and a $75,000 fine. Dr. Mikuriya, who appealed the ruling, was allowed to continue practicing under the supervision of the state-appointed monitor. A longtime registered Republican (he became a Libertarian in later years), Dr. Mikuriya began researching marijuana's therapeutic possibilities in the 1960s. He maintained a list of more than 200 ailments whose symptoms it was said to relieve, including stuttering, insomnia, premenstrual syndrome, writer's cramp, poor appetite and some side effects of cancer treatment, among them nausea and vomiting. Dr. Mikuriya saw his work, he often said, as a means of righting a historical wrong, namely the backlash against medicinal marijuana that began in the "Reefer Madness" era of the late 1930s. "It had been available to clinicians for 100 years until it was taken off the market in 1938," he told the East Bay Express, a Northern California newspaper, in 2004. "I'm fighting to restore cannabis." Tod Hiro Mikuriya was born in Bucks County, Pa., on Sept. 20, 1933. His mother, the former Anna Schwenk, an immigrant from Germany, was a special-education teacher. His father, Tadafumi Mikuriya, the descendant of a Japanese samurai family, was a civil engineer. Tod Mikuriya received a bachelor's degree in psychology from Reed College in Oregon in 1956. From 1956 to 1958, he was a medic in the U.S. Army. Dr. Mikuriya earned his medical degree from Temple University in 1962. While studying there, he became intrigued by a reference in a pharmacology textbook to the medicinal use of marijuana, the first stirrings of his future career. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake