Pubdate: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2014 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/5NyOACet Website: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Jim Taylor Note: Jim Taylor is an Okanagan Centre author and freelance journalist. PTSD VICTIMS DESERVE SCIENCE NOT CENSURE Early last month, veteran RCMP officer Ron Francis committed suicide. Francis claimed smoking marijuana helped him cope with post-traumatic stress disorder. The RCMP ordered him to turn in his uniform, and put him on sick leave. Obviously, marijuana wasn't enough to save him. "The treatment he should have received just wasn't there for him at the end," said Francis's friend and lawyer T.J. Burke. It wasn't there for 16 other RCMP officers who committed suicide over the past nine years, along with 15 retired members. Or for 160 Armed Forces personnel, also suffering from PTSD. Canada and the U.S. have both lost more members to suicide than to enemy combat in Afghanistan and Iraq. PTSD has been known for a long time, but has only been taken seriously in recent years. The Greeks described it after their battles with the Persians. It was called "shell shock" during the First World War; military tribunals executed about 100,000 afflicted soldiers for cowardice or mutiny. By the Second World War, it was called "combat fatigue." American troops returned home with "Post Vietnam Syndrome." PTSD didn't make into psychiatric manuals until 1980. It's now recognized that it affects not just war veterans. Also emergency workers, abuse victims and survivors of disasters. Hundreds of those people have turned to marijuana for relief of their symptoms. After his second deployment in Afghanistan, Fabian Henry tried numerous anti-depressants to control his suicidal thoughts and violent rages. But only one drug worked for him - marijuana. "It literally changed my life," Henry told the Globe and Mail. "I went from suicidal and homicidal, from threatening to kill people and beating people up, to doing yoga seven days a week and spending more time in nature with my kids." There's lots of anecdotal evidence. But, amazingly, it seems, there have been no scientific studies of why, or how, or even if marijuana actually works. Until now. Last week, UBC-Okanagan professor Zach Walsh announced plans for Canada's first clinical trials of marijuana as a treatment for PTSD. Tilray, a Health Canada licensed producer based in Nanaimo, will provide the marijuana and also contribute to the study's estimated $350,000 cost. It's about time. Physical injuries - amputations, chronic illness, disability - receive recognition for affecting a person's life. Mental injuries do not. Because they're invisible, it's too easy to say, "Smarten up! It's all in your mind!" Psychiatrist Dr. Paul Sedge, who works with veterans at an Ottawa mental health centre, identified the automatic objection to such a study. "Marijuana is a substance of abuse and dependence," Sedge said. Agreed - marijuana can be addictive. But I can't help wondering why our society is so paranoid about addiction. Four months away from her death from terminal cancer, my mother objected to taking an opium-based medication to control her diarrhea. She was afraid of becoming addicted. I'm not defending addictions - whether to drugs, gambling, work, or anything else. But the primary charge against marijuana is as a "gateway" to more serious addictions. And that's nonsense. Both tobacco and alcohol are far more potent gateways. The gateway does not cause the addiction; the addiction looks for a gateway. Any objective comparison would have to conclude marijuana is less dangerous than alcohol, the other pain-killer most favoured by PTSD sufferers. Alcohol can be toxic; countless people die every year from alcohol poisoning. But as Robert Gable wrote in American Scientist, "I've found no published cases in the English language that document any deaths from smoked marijuana." Alcohol consumption often leads to violence, especially in domestic situations; marijuana tends to have the opposite effect. Although mild use of alcohol, such as an occasional glass of red wine, may enhance health, excessive consumption causes liver damage, contributes to heart disease and dementia, and accounts for one out of every 15 cancer deaths in the industrialized world. In fact, according to the Journal of the American Medical Association, alcohol consumption is the third leading cause of preventable death in the United States. No similar statistics have ever been compiled for cannabis. Which doesn't make marijuana innocuous. But it does emphasize the need for a proper study of its supposed benefits. "There are many existing medications that have more science behind them," said psychiatrist Sedge. That's why this UBC study is important. It will be a scientifically valid, triple-blind, randomized test of the efficacy of various strains of marijuana, administered through a vaporizer, for treating a long-term mental condition. Neither the investigators nor the participants will know which strain they're getting, or if they're getting marijuana at all. Out of it, we may finally have something better than anecdotal evidence and paranoia to assess whether marijuana really can alleviate PTSD. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom