Pubdate: Wed, 29 May 2013
Source: MidWeek (HI)
Column: Doctor in the House
Copyright: 2013 RFD Publications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.midweek.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/880
Author: Rasa Fournier
Interviewed: Dr. David J. Barton, Owner/physician at Hawaiian-Pacific 
Pain and Palliative Care

MEDICAL CANNABIS: SAFE, EFFECTIVE

Where did you receive your schooling and training?

I have been a medical physician for more than 29 years since 
graduating from the University of Utah School Of Medicine. I 
completed training in general surgery in Los Angeles and plastic 
surgery in Utah. During my general surgery training I completed a 
one-year plastic surgery research fellowship at the University of 
Southern California. I finished my board certifications in both 
general surgery and plastic surgery, and set up private plastic 
surgery practice in Las Vegas. I practiced plastic and reconstructive 
surgery for six years until I underwent cervical spine surgery for 
herniated discs in the neck. The surgery left me with neck pain and 
bodily muscle pain that prevented me from returning to the practice of surgery.

After five years, I was well enough to re-train in pain medicine at 
the University of Utah under a group of renowned pain-medicine 
physicians, who have served as current and past presidents of 
prominent pain academies and societies in the United States. I hold 
memberships in the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the 
International Cannabinoid Research Society and the American 
Telemedicine Association.

What is your current practice?

I am a board-certified pain-medicine physician and owner of 
Hawaiian-Pacific Pain and Palliative Care 
(medicalmarijuanaofhawaii.org). The focus of my practice is the care 
of patients with chronic pain. In addition, I have a strong interest 
in hospice and end-of-life care. This practice is done on a voluntary 
basis and is based in Waimanalo at the Native Hawaiian Model 
Agricultural Village called Pu'uhonua O Waimanalo. Nearly all fees 
generated by the advocacy and clinical practice for medical cannabis 
therapies are used for expenses and Native Hawaiian programs.

Malama First Healthcare is a nonprofit initiative based in the 
village, and its goals are to improve the health care of Native 
Hawaiians worldwide. I serve as their chief medical officer on a 
voluntary basis.

How long have you been an advocate for medical marijuana?

I have been an advocate for the use of medical cannabis since 2008, 
when I was first exposed to a group of chronic pain patients on the 
Big Island who were using cannabis as their sole pain medication, or 
sometimes in combination with pain pills.

Having no personal experience with marijuana use, I found it quite 
fascinating that so many people found benefit and relief to their 
chronic pain conditions using cannabis.

 From there, my professional opinion evolved to the point of full 
political and medical advocacy.

My formal training taught me that marijuana was a gateway drug and 
had no medical use, which I have since learned to be completely 
false. During my training, patients using cannabis often were denied 
opioid therapies and viewed as drug seekers and addicts.

During my training, no one explained to me how cannabis helped with 
pain, except one young man who suffered a severe neck injury in the 
Indonesia tsunami.

Our addiction psychiatrists were forcing him to quit the use of 
cannabis before the group would prescribe opioids. Thankfully, this 
is an out-of-date notion.

These restrictions should never be forced upon any patients who 
suffer severe, disabling pain. As I interviewed more people, I became 
more convinced of the usefulness of medical cannabis.

I thought to myself that thousands of Hawaii residents can't be wrong.

Patients were finding significant relief from chronic pain conditions 
and syndromes that otherwise have poor or no effective treatments.

I then set off on an extensive endeavor to understand the medical 
science of cannabis, cannabinoid receptors, cannabinoid physiology 
and cannabinoid therapies.

At first I was shocked by the suppression of these safe and effective 
therapies because of irrational prejudices and political 
machinations. This was followed by professional and political disdain 
at government, politicians, entities and corporations with ulterior 
motives who are willfully causing millions of people to endure 
greater suffering because of their direct interference in the 
practice of medicine and medical research, and their suppression and 
denial of these therapies. Thankfully, the Hawaii State Legislature 
took a bold stand more than a decade ago, in the face of great 
political pressure, which still exists, and allowed for legal use by 
chronically ill and disabled people.

Chronic pain is the No. 1 medical condition in the United States, 
with an estimated 75 million to 100 million Americans living with it. 
At least 20 million to 25 million Americans live with severe pain. In 
Hawaii, it is conservatively estimated that more than 100,000 live 
with moderate to severe pain from all causes, including arthritic 
degeneration, trauma, metabolic conditions such as diabetes, and 
cancer or its treatment.

Where do things stand right now in the legislative arena?

This year, two bills out of many were vetted in committee and passed 
by both the Hawaii State Senate and House of Representatives and are 
expected to be signed by Gov. Abercrombie. The first and most 
important bill calls for the transfer of the medical cannabis program 
to the Department of Health. Patients and physicians have requested 
this transfer for many years.

It is more appropriate that a program for the health and medical 
welfare of patients be under the auspices of a health department and 
not law enforcement. The second bill attempts to improve significant 
shortcomings in the program itself. Safe access is our No. 1problem 
and concern.

The state allows for the use of cannabis as a medicine but does not 
allow the access to a safe source of that medicine.

 From a medical point of view this is unconscionable. You would not 
make a diabetic grow and produce their own insulin or diabetes pills.

Currently, patients must obtain seeds, grow the plants, overcome the 
hostilities of growing by mold and bugs and then develop the yield 
that becomes their medicine.

The majority of patients are not in a position to even get started.

They don't know how to grow. They don't feel well enough to grow. 
They don't have a place to grow. And there's no guarantee that these 
efforts will result in an adequate medication supply.

The use of cannabis is not an alternative to the use of traditional 
medications  it is a unique medication with unique medical effects.

It is not replaceable with anything else in existence.

Immediate access can only be solved by a dispensary or retail outlet.

A state-run system would be ideal. The other main issue is the 
failure to increase the qualifying diagnoses list, since cannabinoid 
therapy is uniquely helpful to a myriad of conditions. A large 
proportion of Hawaii's cannabis users do it for medical purposes, but 
the law does not respect that and allow them to be legal because they 
are using it for conditions not allowed by law. Our combat soldiers 
are denied its legal use for PTSD after a decade of multiple 
deployments to war zones, and are thereby denied an effective and 
safe treatment for this difficult-to-treat condition. Cannabis is 
superior to all other modalities in existence such as 
anti-depressants and anti-psychotics, which have questionable 
effectiveness and many adverse side effects.

How effective is medical marijuana compared with other painkillers?

At the most recent meeting of the American Academy of Pain Medicine, 
Dr. M. Moskowitz stated that "preclinical studies, surveys, case 
studies and randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trials with 
cannabis have all shown its effectiveness in chronic pain conditions 
. Cannabis works to settle down the processing of wind-up (or 
expanded pain processing in the brain) and is the only drug known to 
do so. It reduces inflammatory pain in the peripheral nerves, and has 
a unique mechanism for pain reduction unlike any other medicine."

Studies have shown that medical cannabis is as effective as opioid 
therapies. By using medical cannabis, many people are able to 
completely eliminate or significantly reduce their use of opioid pain 
pills. This eliminates or significantly reduces the numerous adverse 
side effects that opioids inflict.

The major medical benefit to the withdrawal of opioids is the removal 
of physical dependency. Most importantly, the mortal safety of a 
patient on an opioid regimen is dramatically improved with the 
addition of medical cannabis and a reduction in opioid dosage.

Every day, Americans are dying from the misuse and overdosing of 
opioid medications. There is an epidemic of prescribed opioid pill 
diversions, which can lead to death or ongoing drug addiction.

The use of cannabis in chronic pain also reduces the number of other 
types of medications needed for coexisting sleep and mood disorders, 
and myofascial spasms (within tissue surrounding the muscles) found 
in nearly all chronic pain patients.

There are no other single medications in existence that can treat all 
of these coexisting problems in addition to treating the pain. The 
removal of these other medications also removes their inherent 
adverse side effects and any medications needed for adverse side 
effects, such as drowsiness, constipation or nausea.

Anything you would like to add?

Medical cannabis is an effective and safe therapy that should not be 
denied to any human being.

Government policies are directly interfering with medical science and 
research, along with clinical care.

The prohibition of safe access is an ongoing major problem for 
patients in Hawaii and needs to be corrected by dynamic and 
outside-the-box thinking.

There are solutions to these issues.

The concerns of cannabis habituation, dependency and addiction, along 
with recreational or misuse in young people, are not valid reasons 
for the denial and suppression of these therapies for legitimate 
patients; otherwise, no controlled substances would be allowed in 
clinical practice.

I hear compelling, life-changing stories from patients almost daily. 
Just today, a mother expressed her gratitude to us for helping her 
son, who was practically bedridden for two years, get his life back. 
She cried when he tried cannabis and was able to get up and out of 
bed and start running around.

These are not isolated and rare occurrences.

The addition of medical cannabis as a replacement or adjuvant 
medication to the chronic pain patient's medication regimen will 
greatly improve patient well-being and care, and provide increased 
patient safety.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom