Source: Rocky Mountain News Contact: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 Page 40A EDITORIALS Time to test medical marijuana The National Institutes of Health should accept the recommendation of its expert panel and conduct fulldress clinical tests to determine once and for all whether there are legitimate medical uses for marijuana. Anecdotal evidence suggests there are: in easing the weight loss and nausea caused by certain kinds of cancer chemotherapy; in treating glaucoma; in controlling the symptoms of epilepsy and multiple sclerosis, and in simple pain relief. However, anecdotal evidence is not scientific evidence, and the highly respected NIH has done little or nothing to resolve the controversy. Perhaps, as NIH says, there are competing and better uses for its limited funds, but it's hard not to suspect that the agency has been dragging its feet for fear of what it might find. A finding in favor of medicinal uses of marijuana would undoubtedly enmesh the agency in controversy, but it's better that this question be resolved medically before it is solved politically and that's already begun to happen with bellwether promarijuana referendums in California and Arizona. At this late stage in the marijuana debate, it's impossible to justify willful ignorance.