Pubdate: Mon, 16 Aug 2010 Source: Great Falls Tribune (MT) Copyright: 2010 Great Falls Tribune Contact: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.greatfallstribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2502 Author: Mike Kaszula Note: Mike Kaszula, Great Falls, is an Air Force retiree who has run for a number of public offices in the past decade. Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v10/n627/a08.html MEDICAL MARIJUANA: TIME TO QUIT TREATING IT AS A GAME After reading the guest column by Ronald P. Skipper, I feel compelled to speak out. The Medical Marijuana Act is indeed flawed. It was crafted under less than ideal conditions and, as with any law, requires adjustment as conditions change. If Skipper's solutions were to apply to the commercial drug market dominated by corporate drug companies, any new medication would be stuck in a limbo-like condition -- which is likely the objective. Viagra, Oxycontin and Prozac can all be used in the presence of children and impressionable youths. Ritalin is made to be used by young developing minds. If a drug can be prescribed, it can be over-prescribed. My spouse has had the misfortune to require many doctor and hospital visits in dealing with her multiple sclerosis. This has given me a great deal of insight into the workings of the medical community. I have injected or observed many types of chemicals being introduced into her system by medical persons. Many of them had horrible side effects and brought her near death at times. This is the nature of medicine. Most doctor visits break down to a 30-minute wait in the lobby, an interview of five to 10 minutes with a nurse or other office assistant (not always medically trained) with a seven-minute follow-up by the actual doctor. The increase in qualified patients for medical marijuana is to be expected as more who suffer are discovering it doesn't need to be that way. Marijuana was classified a Schedule I drug in the 1970s when hippies became more influential than the U.S. government and were successful in making sweeping changes in political policy. If read accurately there is room within that law to make it a viable legal medicine as well as a less psychotropic version of LSD. You need only watch a happy, musically themed television commercial that talks of death, organ tissue degradation and outright failure and a host of other deadly effects that get too gruesome to listen to, no matter how pretty the picture is. And these drugs are approved by the Food and Drug Administration. These laws were crafted by a nervous administration trying to stay in power. All televisions were picture tubes and not all were in color. If a law can be made to switch a television with minimal interruption, why is it an antiquated drug law must slow the process of fear-free pain management? Boards, panels and focus groups often do more harm than good. People who need medical marijuana do not speak up easily and are less inclined to jump though the multitude of hoops put before them to get the substance. They do not want to further burden those who care for them, and they give in easily. Medical marijuana has not killed its patients even when over prescribed. Hand guns may kill when in the wrong hands and obtained illegally, but existing laws still allow ownership and safe management by owners. This is a law that needs to be real, not the election football that Medicare and related assistance programs have evolved into. It's time to throw away the ball and quit treating this subject as a game, so those who need it can get it without feeling further ostracized by a well-meaning healthy society. Mike Kaszula Mike Kaszula, Great Falls, is an Air Force retiree who has run for a number of public offices in the past decade. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D