Source: Herald Sun (Australia) Contact: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/ Copyright: News Limited 1999 Pubdate: 13 Jan 1999 Page: 23 Note: Apparently sourced from UK's Daily Mail, but not found in archive DOSES OF DOPE TO GO ON TRIAL LONDON - The legalisation of cannabis in Britain moved a step closer yesterday as doctors announced details of the first medical trials of the drug. Over the next three years, 900 sufferers of multiple sclerosis and post-operative pain will be given regular doses of cannabis through an inhaler or as a pill. If the drug is shown to ease the volunteers' symptoms without side effects, doctors could be prescribing cannabis pills to some of Britain's 85,000 MS sufferers within five years. The move to legalise cannabis for medical treatment was welcomed by patients, who claim thousands take it illegally to ease symptoms of MS. One drugs company, GW Pharmaceuticals, has been granted Home Office permission to grow cannabis for medical research. Its first crop of 5000 plants was sown last August in a secret greenhouse in the south of England and is ready for harvest. The plant - a member of the hemp family - contains chemicals that can numb pain, easing aches and spasms associated with MS. It is also used by some epilepsy sufferers. Professor Tony Moffat, of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, believes the tests will prove the drug has medical benefits. British doctors were allowed to prescribe cannabis until 1973, when it was removed from a list of prescription drugs that still includes heroin and morphine. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski