Pubdate: Thur, 18 Mar 1999 Source: San Mateo County Times (CA) Copyright: 1999 by MediaNews Group, Inc. and ANG Newspapers Contact: http://www.newschoice.com/newspapers/alameda/smct/ LET SCIENCE RUN MARIJUANA DEBATE THIS week's Institute of Medicine report on medical marijuana should send a message to the feds that it's time to start letting science - not politics - steer this debate. The report concluded that marijuana may ease pain and nausea while stimulating appetite. It also found no evidence that smoking pot leads to other drug abuse. Commissioned by the White House Office of National Drug Policy, the study included analysis of previous research as well as interviews with patients, doctors and prescribers. To the voters, patients, doctors and others who have long advocated the medical use of marijuana, the study's conclusions don't come as a surprise, but simply confirm what many have already learned through experience and anecdotal evidence. The report is important because it is so comprehensive and because the Institute of Medicine is an independent and respected organization, an affiliate of the National Academy of Science. The office that paid for it, ironically, is run by Mr. War on Drugs himself, Barry McCaffery. We can only hope that those factors lend the study some weight and credibility, because it's at the federal level where California faces its toughest battles in making the compassionate use of marijuana legal. With new Attorney General Bill Lockyer in charge, we finally seem to have some rational leadership on this issue at the state level. Rejecting the obstructionist stance of his predecessor, Dan Lungren, Lockyer has ordered medical marijuana advocates and law enforcement officials to come together and find a way to make Proposition 215 work. Proposition 215 allowed the used of marijuana for medical purposes, but Lungren and zealous federal authorities shut down any organized attempts to provide marijuana to the ill. Now, the two sides are finding areas of agreement despite their adversarial relationship in the past. But whatever recommendations they come up with could be useless if the federal law doesn't change. Lockyer has said he'll lobby Washington to reclassify the drug, a job that could be made easier if he's armed with scientific data. Unfortunately, there are probably those who won't be able to see past the "Reefer Madness" hysteria that surrounds marijuana and scores easy political points. Rep. Bill McCollum, R-Fla., who led the fight to get the House to condemn medical marijuana last fall, has already expressed fears that the Institute of Medicine report could encourage marijuana smoking. The report, however, suggests studying ways of delivering the active ingredients of pot without smoking, which can lead to respiratory and other problems. It also points out that such studies could take several years, and that clinical studies should be designed to last six months or less for patients who could get some relief from smoking marijuana. The federal government is finding itself defending a less and less defensible position. It's time for policy makers to get smart - and compassionate - and allow clinical studies to move forward. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck