Pubdate: Mon, 19 Apr 2010 Source: Argus Leader (Sioux Falls, SD) Copyright: 2010 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Tony Ryan, a retired police officer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.) TODAY'S DEBATE: LEGALIZING MEDICAL MARIJUANA (PRO BY TONY RYAN) Fear of Arrest Shouldn't Be Part of Care for Some As a retired police officer, I know well what it is like to work the front lines of keeping a community safe and secure. From this experience, and having relatives who have suffered from cancer, I have become a passionate supporter for safe access to medical marijuana. I am urging fellow South Dakotans to support the Safe Access Act (Initiated Measure 13) on the ballot this November. The therapeutic use of marijuana is supported by an ever-growing consensus in medical and scientific communities. To name a few: the American Nurses Association, American Public Health Association, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, American Academy of HIV Medicine, American Medical Students Association, Assembly of the American Psychiatric Association, American Pain Foundation, National Women's Health Network, several state medical associations and societies and the Federation of American Scientists. In 1999, the government's own Institute of Medicine determined that "[n]ausea, appetite loss, pain and anxiety, are all afflictions of wasting and can be mitigated by marijuana." In 2008, the American College of Physicians, and in late 2009, the American Medical Association, both adopted resolutions that urge the federal government to re-classify marijuana so that more research and development of cannabis-based medicines can be pursued. The growing trend of support is parallel to the overwhelming amount of research that consistently has shown marijuana to be effective at alleviating symptoms associated with cancer, glaucoma, multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C, lupus and a growing list of other ailments. Patients who suffer these afflictions should have the safety and security of using doctor-recommended and research-supported therapy without fear of arrest, imprisonment and a criminal record. Under a legal, regulated system with Measure 13, patients would have the safety and assurance of cultivating their own medicine and would not need to go out on the street and buy it from drug dealers. Measure 13 is about providing some of our state's most vulnerable residents with access to a legitimate medicine that an ever-growing body of research has shown to be safe and effective. Fourteen other states have passed medical marijuana laws, including our neighbors in Montana who passed a measure similar to our proposal by a margin of more than 20 percent in 2004. Opponents have been quick to claim our measure sends the wrong message to children. However, the exact opposite is true. A considerable body of data shows that no state with a medical marijuana law has experienced an increase in youth marijuana use since its law's enactment. All states have reported overall decreases - - exceeding 50 percent in some age groups. Although my perspective is shaped by 36 years of fighting crime, I don't think it takes a law enforcement background to agree that health care-related drug use is not deserving of criminal sanctions. Never could I imagine an elderly relative using a natural medicine to get through chemoradiation being in the same jail cell as a dangerous, violent criminal. Please join me this November in supporting Measure 13 so that state law will better protect sick and dying South Dakotans who need our compassion - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake