Pubdate: Fri, 26 Nov 2010 Source: Peterborough This Week (CN ON) Copyright: Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.mykawartha.com/generalform Website: http://www.mykawartha.com/community/peterborough Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1794 Author: Joel Wiebe IT'S LEGAL OR IT'S NOT The government needs to decide either to treat medicinal marijuana like any other prescription drug or ban it all together It's wrong for the Canadian government to say medicinal marijuana is legal, but then make it ridiculously hard to acquire. To be clear, I've never used marijuana and am far from a 'legalize it' campaigner. But over the last couple months, my oblivious conclusions about access to the drug have been brought to reality. Like any other prescription drug, I figured the doctor writes the prescription and the patient gets it filled at the pharmacy. Silly me. The reality is, it regularly takes patients half a year for their prescription to be processed and several months go by between prescription expiry and the eventual renewal. This is despite a doctor, the person who likely best knows their patient's condition, prescribing the drug. Once the person is allowed to use marijuana, actually getting their hands on it can be challenging -- some turn to compassion clubs, others go to street dealers, and some may choose to grow it themselves. Since the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario advises doctors to only prescribe marijuana as a last resort, to prescribe it with caution, and ultimately, they don't even need to prescribe it, there ends up being few doctors willing to sign up their patients. Doctor's should never be forced to prescribe something they don't feel comfortable with and should prescribe everything with caution, but it seems odd that there's such resistance to what should simply be considered another drug to possibly help their patient. What we have is a government policy that pays lip service to the issue but holds little action. The problem is that either marijuana can legally be used for prescribed medical uses, or it's illegal. Instead of only going half the distance, someone should be able to get a doctor's prescription and take it to the pharmacy right away to be filled, committing to it's legality, or the government needs to rethink whether it should be legal in the first place. I can't imagine undergoing surgery and having to wait four months to get my Tylenol 3s or percocets -- drugs very capable of being resold on the streets or abused by patients. I'm not convinced marijuana needs to be outright legalized, or for that matter, neither should oxycontin, morphine, or other prescription narcotics. Would I consider medicinal marijuana if a doctor recommended it? I'm not sure, but I'd like to know that my options are all available and accessible. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt