Pubdate: Friday, March 5, 1999 Source: Nelson Daily News (Canada) Contact: http://www.nelsondailynews.com/ Author: Bob Hall - Daily News Staff JURY STILL OUT ON MEDICAL MARIJUANA Locals find good and bad in Health Minister Allan Rock's plan to test illegal drug Local reaction to federal Health Minister Alan Rock's plan to start clinical trials on the medical use of marijuana is, not surprisingly, mixed. On Wednesday, Rock announced that he has asked his officials to draw up a plan for trials and to figure out how a safe supply of the illegal drug could be provided to those who might need marijuana to ease the pain. "It's a step in the right direction and it's common sense really," said Dustin Sunflower, a partner in Nelson's Holy Smoke Culture Shop and a well-known pot crusader. "The highest thing that a society can be based on is compassion because that means that society cares for people and cares for the sick. So for the government to deny medicinal cannabis is uncompassionate...so it would seem we are heading in the right direction if compassion is the highest ideal." Nelson City Police Sgt. Dan Maluta does not view Rock's decision in the same light. "I have a concern because people will get on the bandwagon and say "you see even our federal health officials feel that there is some validity to it." They will then think it legitimizes their own use for whatever ails them in the broad sense," Maluta told the Daily News. Various lobby groups and individuals contend that marijuana can help ease the symptoms of multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, advanced AIDS and a range of other ailments. Rock said Wednesday that Canadians support the use "on a compassionate basis, if someone is dying." The health minister said before the government makes any final decision it wants scientific evidence and not just anecdotal testimony on whether smoking pot can help relieve pain. "I know quite a few people who use it for medicinal purposes in this area," said Sunflower. "These people are sick. When they get cannabis it could be their next meal or their next night of sleep, they don't function as normal human beings without it." One local resident who suffers from multiple sclerosis welcomed the federal government's initiative. "I think it's really good for stress and for being able to enjoy a good night's sleep," said the man who asked that his name be kept anonymous. "It helps with pain and the legal drugs I'm on now have side effects and I find pot helps with the nausea that it causes. " The man, who was diagnosed with the disease 15 years ago, said it may also help take away the negative stigma often attached to marijuana. "Right now doctors and nurses just don't want to talk to you about it," he said. "At least this will open up the dialogue." Kootenay-Boundary-Okanagan MP Jim Gouk said he's not making any judgment on the decision at this point. "I don't have a problem with them doing some proper scientific determination as to the effect of it," the Reform Party MP said. "I would hope that in doing that they don't limit it to smoking it because my preliminary investigation suggests that any medical advantage could be obtained through methods other than smoking it. There are prescription drugs on the market which contain THC (one of the psychoactive elements in cannabis) and are legal under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. Gouk said he hopes the government looks into other types of similar solutions that do not include actually inhaling smoke." "Putting the THC aspect of marijuana aside, smoking is smoking," Gouk said. "It's pretty hard to promote the ingestion of smoke coming off of burning refuse as a health product. So if THC can provide relief to people in certain circumstances and you can get all the benefits of that through something other than smoking then we should be looking into that in this study." Gouk said he has been contacted by a few of his constituents who inquired about the potential of legally growing medicinal marijuana. The local MP agrees with Rock that many people do have compassion for those who use pot to ease the pain of illness. "I did a survey about the concept of medical marijuana and there does seem to be a level of support for it," Gouk said. "So I think this is the next logical step. You don't rush into something like that, but you don't blindly close your eyes and ears to it either." Maluta is not convinced. "What health practitioner would prescribe marijuana, which has some 4,000 toxins and other substances in its smoke, to try and cure or help someone would be beyond me," Maluta said. When the federal government's trials are complete, Maluta hopes the evidence will support the opposite of what they are intended to do. "I'm hoping that part of what is driving this is that they are going to find from the clinical study that no practitioners are going to support actually inhaling raw marijuana in order to treat illness," said Maluta. "It will refute it and then it could no longer be raised as a defence in court." While the trials are being planned, Rock said he is looking into the possibility of issuing special permission for individuals to use the drug on a case-by-case basis. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady