Pubdate: Wed, 08 Jun 2011 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Darrell Bellaart, The Daily News MEDICINAL POT TOO HARD TO GET It's time to stop blowing smoke over medical marijuana. A compassion club now operating downtown supplies patients with pot in some kind of quasi-legal grey area. This government takes a dim view of drug use and it creates a climate within Health Canada whereby sick people who need it are having trouble getting it. Many doctors are afraid to prescribe it. I learned this myself during a recent serious illness. Canada has certainly made headway moving away from cannabis criminalization in recent years, but it looks like the pendulum will soon swing further toward restricting its use. Some will doubt marijuana's value as a therapeutic drug, but the plant's medical uses have been known for ages. Two years ago I was stricken with vasculitis, a rare, often painful and sometimes life-threatening immunological condition. First, I took over-the-counter pills, then codeine. But I wanted to stay off this addictive drug. My doctor wouldn't sign a medical cannabis licence application. Instead, I was given a prescription for Nabilone, a pharmaceutical form of the drug, which took care of my pain and the nausea of another drug that controls the vasculitis. But there are problems with Nabilone: The drug lasts 12 hours, so each time I took it I'd get so zonked out I couldn't drive for an entire day. I understand it's a common complaint for those with diseases like multiple sclerosis, cancer and HIV/AIDS. Many prefer the manageable effects of smoking pot over pharmaceuticals. Smoking is harmful, but new vaporizers are said to greatly reduce that harm. Users can smoke what they want, when they want. Others bake it in foods or make a tincture. The folks at Mid-Island Compassion Society say many of their patients don't like the quality of Health Canada's pot and find the rules restrictive. When Health Canada first regulated medical marijuana, the applications took a few days to be processed. Now a patient can wait a month or longer. With a Conservative majority, promises of more prisons could materialize. Those who advocate for complete legalization of marijuana say it is safer than alcohol, which causes considerable social harm and crime. Cannabis is often linked to crime, too, but advocates says it's because it is illegal that gangsters can make huge amounts of money. Last week, a Maple Ridge medical-marijuana grower, licensed for 220 plants, was charged with having 1,500. Similar allegations arose last month in Nova Scotia. One thing is clear: The current situation makes a small number of powerful gangsters even more rich and powerful, fuelling the Conservatives' argument for more, bigger jails. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.