Source: CNN Newsday Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 1999 Feedback: http://www.cnn.com/feedback/ Forum: http://www.cnn.com/discussion/ Website: http://www.cnn.com/ INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE ISSUES REPORT STRONGLY SUPPORTING MEDICAL USE OF MARIJUANA Aired March 17, 1999 - 12:03 a.m. ET THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. JEANNE MESERVE, CNN ANCHOR: An advisory panel to the federal government today issued a report strongly supporting the medical use of marijuana. The Institute of Medicine said the chemicals in marijuana can not provide a cure, but are useful in relieving symptoms in patients for whom other drugs are not effective. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) JOHN BENSON, OREGON HEALTH SCIENCE UNIV.: For these patients, we found cannabinoids appear to hold potential for treating pain, chemotherapy induced nausea and vomiting, and the poor appetite and wasting caused by AIDS or advanced cancer. (END VIDEO CLIP) MESERVE: The institute said marijuana is not especially addictive and found no evidence that its use leads to harder drugs. But it did note that marijuana can cause respiratory disease and recommended development of a standardized form of the drug that could be administered in other ways. Joining us now to discuss these findings and the possible impact medical correspondent Eileen O'Connor. Hi, Eileen. EILEEN O'CONNOR, CNN MEDICAL CORRESPONDENT: Hi, Jeanne. Well, this is a very significant study because the Institute of Medicine carries a lot of weight. It is independent and very well respected. Because it did say that marijuana does have therapeutic benefits in terms of pain relief, as well as control of nausea and the stimulation of the appetite. This is a significant report. But it also does recommend clinical trials to help develop a pill or inhalant substitute. It does admit, though, that until a non- smoked rapid-onset cannabinoid drug is available, for some patients, there is no clear alternative. MESERVE: What is the administration going to do with this report? A very ticklish subject here. O'CONNOR: It is very ticklish. There are some states who have moved to legalize marijuana for medical purposes. But the administration is pointing to the findings that more research is needed, and what they are saying is that they do not think that this is a sign that they should go ahead and legalize marijuana. They're saying we're -- where we're at is very comfortable. And they say the future is in research on cannabinoid drugs, an inhalant or a pill. But that is not satisfying patients. MESERVE: What about advocates for legalization? What are they saying about the report? O'CONNOR: Well, of course, they are angered, and they are saying the calls for more research are basically just calls for more stalling. And they are pointing to the research that the IOM has done, saying that it itself admits that for some patients there is no alternative. They also say that kids won't get a mixed message if this is treated like any other medicinal drug, say example like morphine. If parents tell their children this is only to be used as a controlled substance administered by a doctor -- Jeanne. MESERVE: Eileen O'Connor, medical correspondent, thanks for joining us. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake