Pubdate: Mon, 05 Jul 2010 Source: Argus, The (UK) Copyright: 2010 Newsquest Media Group Contact: http://www.theargus.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2706 SUSSEX MS SUFFERER'S DRUG PLEA Health bosses are being urged to agree to prescribe a new cannabis based drug developed for people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Campaigners fear primary care trusts (PCTs) in Sussex may follow the example of others in the South of England who have ordered doctors not to prescribe Sativex. They say the drug, despite being recently licensed for NHS use, is not effective but MS patients say they should be allowed to have the drug if they feel it would help them and are worried a postcode lottery will emerge, with people in some areas denied it. Shana Witcomb, 31, from Hove, was diagnosed with MS more than two years ago. She has to use a mobility scooter but does not let the condition take over her life. Ms Witcomb said: ?I know there have been loads of people with MS who have smoked cannabis and really seem to have benefited from it. ?It does not work for everyone because the condition can affect people in different ways but if there is a legal, properly tested drug that can help, then that choice should be available to them. ?People are not going to want to break the law by smoking cannabis, while others don?t like the idea of having to use tobacco with it. ?I?m surprised some PCTs are refusing to allow doctors to prescribe it. ?I hope the local PCTs in Sussex will agree to allow it to be used when needed.? Sativex, which has taken 11 years to develop, is an oral spray designed to reduce pain. It costs ?125 a bottle, which works out at about ?11 a day for the average user. At the moment, any patient in Sussex wanting to use Sativex has to apply for special funding from their local PCT until a decision is made about whether it can be used generally. A spokeswoman for NHS Brighton and Hove said: ?Our prescribing committee has not yet had the chance to consider the funding of Sativex for patients with MS.? Ed Holloway, head of care and services research at the MS Society, said: ?Sativex can help to alleviate one of the most distressing symptoms of MS and its licensing is good news for people with progressive forms of the condition for whom drugs and therapies are scarce. ?We?d like to see it made available to anybody who might benefit.? There are about 100,000 people living with MS in the UK. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt