HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Using Marijuana As Medicine
Pubdate: Sat, 17 Apr 2004
Source: Standard, The (St. Catharines, CN ON)
Copyright: 2004, The Standard
Contact:  http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/676
Author: Peter Downs
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada)

USING MARIJUANA AS MEDICINE

Mornings bring the greatest agony.

Those seven or eight hours of sleep most people count on for
rejuvenation leave Matthew Mernagh in physical torment.

His thin body stiffens during the idle hours he's in
bed.

It's as though the cartilage in his joints and between the discs of
his spine has been somehow removed during the night and replaced by
quick-setting cement.

Rising from bed and trying to unlock his frame from the rigour
mortis-like grip of severe osteoarthritis sends currents of pain
radiating along his crumbling spine, through his legs and down the
bones of his swollen arms to his clenched hands.

At the age of 30, Mernagh sometimes feels as though he's trapped
inside the shell of a decrepit old man.

"My spine is 70," the St. Catharines native said last
week.

"I can actually feel the grinding of the discs because there's nothing
there. The cartilage is really shot."

A journalist and writer, Mernagh has been unable to work full-time in
two years and collects disability benefits.

He's tried conventional over-the-counter medications to relieve his
chronic pain without much success. The drug that delivers him release
is marijuana.

Even with a single puff on his pot pipe over a morning cup of coffee,
Mernagh said he feels his rigid hands begin to relax. Another hit and
the shooting pains emanating from his spine begin to subside.

"It makes a huge difference in my life," said Mernagh, who has been
smoking pot regularly for the past six years to relieve his arthritic
symptoms.

"I don't sit around and get high. This to me is making my life better.
The effect of marijuana for me is pain relief."

But each time Mernagh fills up the bowl of his small blue pipe with
dried pot leaves, lights them up and draws the smoke into his lungs,
he's breaking the law.

Mernagh -- similar to thousands of Canadians -- is treating himself
with pot outside the parameters of Health Canada's legal medical
marijuana program.

In July 2001, the federal government legalized the use of medicinal
marijuana for people with terminal illnesses and other serious health
conditions, including cancer, AIDS and multiple sclerosis.

But critics complain the controversial program is so badly beset by
troubles and bogged down in red tape that it is virtually impossible
for people with health problems to access it.

The key stumbling block is a Health Canada requirement that a
physician endorse the patient's application, stating that the medical
benefits to the patient of smoking marijuana outweigh any potential
risks.

But without sufficient scientific studies yet complete to give
credence to the claim, doctors are extremely reluctant to support applicants.

Both the Canadian Medical Association and the Ontario Medical
Association have advised their physician memberships against signing
the Health Canada declaration for patients seeking medical marijuana.

"What the Health Canada form requires people to do is sign something
which says they know something they don't know and cannot know," said
Dr. Ted Boadway, the OMA's executive director of health policy.

"That is a statement that no physician in Canada can answer. They
can't answer that with knowledge."

As a result, there are only 78 certified users across the country who
are receiving either marijuana from Health Canada or seeds to grow
their own pot.

Thousands of other sick and dying Canadians buy illegal marijuana on
the street or grow it themselves to ease their symptoms.

"My government is pushing me to black market sources," said Mernagh.
"You can still get arrested for marijuana. Whether it's half a gram,
half a joint or half a pound, if they want to arrest you they will."

But that threat hasn't stopped Mernagh from patronizing pot dealers in
St. Catharines on a regular basis for himself and other sick people
around Niagara.

Last September, Mernagh founded the Niagara Compassion Society, a
non-profit organization that helps people obtain marijuana for medical
reasons.

The group, modelled on similar organizations in Toronto, Vancouver and
other Canadian cities, provides pot to 10 people, but Mernagh foresees
membership growing to about 100.

"These people are genuinely ill," said Mernagh. "They've tried
everything else before."

As a condition of membership, applicants are required to provide a
letter of diagnosis from a licenced physician attesting to their
medical condition.

But unlike Health Canada's program, physicians are not asked to put in
writing their belief that the benefits of taking marijuana are greater
than potential risks.

Mernagh acquires pot for the organization's registered users and
distributes it to them.

"We're a co-operative of medical marijuana users," he said.

"I'm not interested at all in the recreational pursuit of
marijuana."

But the eyes of the law may not see any difference between
run-of-the-mill drug dealing and what the Niagara Compassion Society
is doing.

Niagara Regional Police won't make allowances for medical marijuana
use that falls outside regulations set by the federal government,
deputy chief Donna Moody (said?).

"We can't ignore the law. The law's in place," she
said.

"We don't support recreational use of the drug. That's creating a
criminal enterprise."

Mernagh said he hasn't been contacted by police, but he's already
sought legal advice and lined up a lawyer in the event that they do.

"If the police want to have a showdown, I'm prepared. Because I'm not
willing to go without marijuana," he said.

"There is a fear that in being as public as I am, the police will say,
'We've had enough.' "

Rhonda Thompson, who co-ordinates a needle exchange program for AIDS
Niagara, would like to see Health Canada hand over its entire medical
marijuana program to compassion organizations such as the one Mernagh
launched.

"That federal government program, to be honest, is an absolute
nightmare," she said.

"The paperwork is incredible and you also have to get doctors willing
to sign on your behalf. A lot of the physicians out there just do not
want to get the reputation of being the pot doc."

Many people with HIV or AIDS smoke marijuana to stimulate their
appetites, soothe pain and combat feelings of nausea.

But Thompson said she's not met a single client of AIDS Niagara who
was able to get approval to buy marijuana through Health Canada's program.

"It just seems to be a logical choice to turn all of this over to
compassion clubs," she said. "There are safeguards in place to ensure
it's not being abused and it's going to help those who are truly ill
and who truly need it."

Health Canada is looking at ways to make its medical marijuana program
more easily accessible for people with serious illnesses, said
spokeswoman Catherine Saunders.

"The idea is that we want to be making some amendments to streamline
the application process," she said.

That could include changing the declaration physicians are asked to
sign "to better acknowledge the limited information available on the
safety and efficacy of marijuana for medical purposes," said Saunders.

In the meantime, the department is overseeing research into the
medical effects of marijuana on people who suffer pain in a clinical
study being carried out at McGill University's pain management clinic.

"Marijuana is a controlled substance everywhere around the world,"
said Saunders.

"The benefits of it as a therapeutic drug have not yet been proven,
although there are anecdotal reports."

Federal Public Health Minister Carolyn Bennett saw the anecdotal
evidence of marijuana's positive impact on the ill firsthand when she
worked as a physician in Toronto before entering politics.

"As a family doctor, there were some patients who were very much
helped by marijuana," Bennett said in an interview Thursday, following
a meeting with public health officials in St. Catharines.

"There was one patient, for example, with MS who was very much more
functional using marijuana."

Bennett, who represents the Ontario riding of St. Paul's, said the
government needs to review its medical marijuana program and make it
easier for "people on the ground" to use.

"There's no question the medical community has been uncomfortable with
it. It's not something they're trained to do," she said.

"We're clear we've got to get going on the clinics and the applied
research it will take to show what works and what doesn't, and for
what conditions."

It's also important for the government to take another look at
regulations that determine how people with serious illnesses register
to receive medical pot, she said.

"I think it's clear that these patients   shouldn't have to go into
the streets to buy it. So what are we going to do to get them a safe
product?" said Bennett, adding she's in favour of the
decriminalization of marijuana.

Regina Szymanski, executive director of the Multiple Sclerosis Society
Niagara Peninsula Chapter of Hope, is encouraged that the federal
government is studying marijuana's health benefits.

"We really don't promote something until it's scientifically proven,"
she said.

"If the medical research shows that it works, then the process for
people to get a treatment that might be helpful to them will be so
much easier."

But even with improved access, making the decision to smoke marijuana
as a medical treatment isn't easy, said one user.

The 46-year-old Niagara woman, diagnosed with MS more than a decade
ago, asked not to be identified because of the negative stigma
attached to marijuana use.

Even though she smokes pot frequently throughout the day -- typically
every three hours -- she hides it from her young son, her relatives
and her friends.

She's licenced by Health Canada to grow medical marijuana for her own
use, but she doesn't do it. Instead she buys pot from regular suppliers.

"I wish it was more accepted in that way, but I don't want people
saying, 'I don't want my child playing with your child because you
have this stuff in your house.' I won't risk that," she said.

However, she's convinced smoking marijuana is the most effective way
she can ease the painful spasms that lock her legs on a daily basis --
sometimes powerful enough to tear her muscles.

"They stiffen straight out. No one can bend them and you've got to
wait for it to subside," she said. "Marijuana will stop it almost
immediately."

But she also worries smoking marijuana is harming her respiratory
system and that she may have become addicted to it.

"I definitely have a medical benefit. There's no doubt about it," she
said. "But if something better were to come along, I'd abandon it,
although I don't know how easy that would be any more because of the
dependency issues." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake