Pubdate: Wed, 23 Mar 2016 Source: Southland Times (New Zealand) Copyright: 2016 Fairfax New Zealand Limited Contact: http://www.southlandtimes.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1041 PETITION SEEKS REFORM FOR MEDICINAL CANNABIS Medicinal cannabis campaigner Rose Renton has started a new petition calling on the Government to make cannabis-based medications available in New Zealand without delay. The petition, which was launched yesterday, urges "reform of the law to allow access to quality, affordable cannabis for medical use" and says current efforts to regulate access to pharmaceutical-grade cannabis products are "too strict, too slow and too expensive". Renton hoped the petition would draw between 50,000 and 100,000 signatories and more discussion in mainstream media. She believed a March 16 change to guidelines on medicinal cannabis on the Ministry of Health website indicated a move towards stricter approval criteria for products other than Sativex, currently the only variety approved for prescription in New Zealand. Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne said changes on the website were merely grammatical, or to redirect searches for "marijuana" to medicinal cannabis information. But Renton said she saw "a tightening of restrictions". "We have been having this conversation for over a year but only last week the minister of health set an impossible criteria." Renton said Dunne's indication in March that New Zealand would likely follow Australia's lead on medicinal cannabis trials and legislation would take years too long. Renton, whose son Alex was the first New Zealander to be treated with medical cannabidoil oil Elixinol, said Sativex has a higher THC content than some other medicinal cannabis products, making it unsuitable for many conditions and lifestyles. "We have very limited options in palliative care and the conditions that cannabis is known to support, heal and nurture are very clear worldwide. I think New Zealanders are feeling very unheard. We are asking for quality of care and access to medicinal cannabis. I don't think we have two years to wait." She hoped news that prominent Kiwis broadcaster Paul Holmes, cricket star Martin Crowe and trade unions president Helen Kelly had used medicinal cannabis would "enable other ordinary New Zealanders to stand up and not be afraid". "These are people that are dying, and that's a scary position because I don't want to break the law but I remember what it was like with Alex and I want them to be proactive in their own healing. "Every time something comes up about medicinal cannabis, it has Alex's name on it so it would be lovely to give his memory a voice. He was against prohibition and he would be horrified that the criteria had become so difficult." Renton said discussions around medicinal cannabis needed to take "unprecedented" public support for legalisation into account. "The only way to get what we wanted for Alex was to go public. We had a lot of pressure on us to play by the rules and in the end we didn't but we have managed to start a national conversation." FAIRFAX NZ - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom