Pubdate: Sun, 15 Mar 2015 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Copyright: 2015 Canberra Times Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/71 FACTS, NOT DOGMA, MUST LEAD CANNABIS DEBATE The difficult debate over reforming marijuana laws returned to the ACT on Friday when a Legislative Assembly committee began taking submissions on the issue. That gravely ill members of our community are suffering needlessly and forced to plead with legislators because they cannot get access to the drug is a situation we owe to them to fix. According to overseas evidence, cannabis products can offer great relief, under the right conditions, although debate remains. It is also unacceptable that doctors may face prosecution for advising those patients to access marijuana products. But Health Minister Simon Corbell is right to raise concerns about suggestions that patients should be allowed to grow limited quantities of the drug in their homes. Cannabis is a chemically complex plant with many different strains and breeds. What ill Canberrans need is the ability to buy a safe, known version of the drug, via prescription from a doctor with suitable knowledge of its effects. It's not fair to ask seriously unwell patients to grow their own medicine, potentially putting them at further risk from break-ins and theft. Those in need of opioids are not expected to grow poppies in their backyards and do their best to get the dose right. While there has been a lot of research into medicinal cannabis in other countries, once the medical debate is settled in Australia there is no reason why cannabis should be treated any differently to drugs like opioids. Regulated, grown in controlled conditions, properly tested to recognised drug safety standards and made available where appropriate. The other side of the debate is the need to take a more cautious path in relaxing cannabis laws than has happened in the United States. Advocates of the drug are quick to point to its benefits, but are less enthusiastic to highlight some of the lingering concerns about potential links to mental illness. Like any drug, cannabis can have a seriously negative impact on the lives of some users. In the US, where it is possible to buy the drug legally at shops in a number of states, the industry has become a circus, dominated by the recreational users who often use medicinal grounds to justify their use of the drug. Recreational use is a debate for another day. For now, the doctors and the patients, not the boosters, should be the voices with the greatest authority as the ACT attempts to find a better outcome for those most in need of this potential reform. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom