Pubdate: Sun, 03 May 2015 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2015 Houston Chronicle Publishing Company Division, Hearst Newspaper Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/198 Page: B13 Medical marijuana Prescription Painkillers Can Prove Deadly, but Alternatives Remain Illegal in Texas. The days before Thanksgiving should be filled with turkey recipes and touch football, building up to the excitement of the Christmas season. For six people in Harris County, however, those days were their last. Over a period of two days in November 2013, half-a-dozen Houstonians died of prescription drug overdoses ("Pain pill OD data largely unsound," Page A1, April 26). Drugs kill someone in Harris County almost every day. None of those deaths are due to marijuana. Our laws fail to reflect this public safety risk, and it is time for a change. The prescription drug epidemic has grown so far out of control that Texas can barely measure it. While local medical examiners counted 275 prescription drug related deaths in Harris County in 2013, state data recorded only 179. A lack of uniform standards leaves room for errant numbers, and a lack of specificity on death certificates can leave families wondering which drugs were actually involved. Amid all the hazy uncertainty, one thing is clear: Texans will die from prescription drugs. We've made a deal with the pharmaceutical devil. Whether through accidents or suicide, painkillers like hydrocodone and anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax can and will kill people. Yet we still allow widespread prescription of these pills because the benefits outweigh the risks. What if there was another way? Between 1999 and 2010, 13 states implemented a single policy that saw prescription drug deaths drop by 25 percent: They legalized medical marijuana. Correlation doesn't mean causation, but medical marijuana can work to replace risky painkillers for many patients. Even merely supplementing traditional prescriptions with medical marijuana can help keep patients away from the dangerous overdose threshold, allowing them to rely on fewer pills to get the relief they need. It can also reduce the number of prescription pills in open circulation, making it easier to keep the pills out of dangerous hands. Whatever risks marijuana poses, at least it doesn't kill. This past week, advocates for medical marijuana lined up to testify in Austin in support of two bills. One, House Bill 837, would create a legal defense for doctors who prescribe medical marijuana and for patients who use it. Another bill, House Bill 3785, would create a statewide regulatory structure for legalizing medical marijuana. Elected officials heard the heartwrenching experiences of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and military veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, all of them desperate to live a life free of pain ("Medical marijuana bills left in committee after emotional testimony," Chron.com, Wednesday). "We risked our lives and sacrificed our health for our country," said David Bass, a disabled Army veteran. "We deserve access to medication that is safe and effective." Parents of children suffering from epileptic seizures also testified for another bill, House Bill 892, which would regulate "compassionate use" cannabidiol oil - a marijuana-based oil that is low in THC, the psychoactive component that gets people high. Studies show that the oil can help people with intractable epilepsy, possibly by calming excess signals in the brain. Currently available drugs for treating seizures often have harmful side effects ("Panel hears parents' plea for marijuana oil," Page B5, Wednesday). "These families have no other options," said state Rep. Stephanie Klick, R-Fort Worth, who co-authored the bill. "They've exhausted the FDA-approved drugs that are available to them." After all the testimony, however, the medical marijuana bills were left pending in committee. There's no doubt that medical marijuana still needs more study, but that scientific research remains encumbered by the federal government's insistence that marijuana remain a Schedule I drug, which relegates it as dangerous with no medical value. Tell that to the more than 1 million medical marijuana patients across 23 states and Washington, D.C. The horse is already out of the barn, and Texas needs to deal with this new reality. There's plenty we don't know about medical marijuana's long term effects on society. But we do know that it offers an alternative to potentially dangerous prescription pills. People shouldn't have to risk their lives to cure their pain, or risk breaking the law to find the help they need. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom