Medical marijuana
Tali Swann-Sternberg
Wednesday, 20 June 2007 19:21 UTC
Medical marijuana, now legal in 12 states (AK, CA, CO, HI, ME, MT, NV, NM, OR, RI, VT, and WA), remains a controversial topic in much of the United States. The Connecticut state legislature and New York State Assembly passed bills to legalize medical marijuana earlier this month. The CT bill was subsequently vetoed on June 19th by Governor Jodi Rell, who cited the bill’s failure to establish a system for distribution and regulation of marijuana as the reason for her veto. Disagreement on the best method of distribution of marijuana may also defeat the NY bill, which is currently stalled in the NY State Senate as a result of this point of contention. However, Governor Eliot Spitzer, who opposed medical marijuana in the past, announced his support for the therapeutic use of marijuana after the bill was passed and said that he would sign the bill provided that it is “properly structured.”
Although the therapeutic potential of marijuana has been established in scientific studies, controversy remains regarding whether these benefits outweigh the harm of smoking. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine released a report stating that “scientific data indicate the potential therapeutic value of cannabinoid drugs, primarily THC, for pain relief, control of nausea and vomiting, and appetite stimulation; smoked marijuana, however, is a crude THC delivery system that also delivers harmful substances.” Alternative delivery systems of THC could eliminate this objection to medical marijuana. A recent pilot study of marijuana vaporization, published in CPT, concluded that the “vaporization of cannabis is a safe and effective mode of delivery of THC.” Other smokeless modes of delivery include ingestion and the use of tinctures.
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Replies
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Having just been taking multiple medications to manage the very rare Behcet’s Disease with which I was diagnosed 3 years ago, I am just beginning to realise that the prescribed drugs are probably causing greater problems than the presenting condition.
Does anybody know about the use of medical marijuana for this condition? I am not a smoker, which worries me somewhat – the thought of smoking anything makes me feel quite ill. So I would be particularly interested in the use of vaporisers and their efficacy (or not).
Mattie
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Anonymous
Mattie,
I suffer from NBD and I agree the meds can be devastating. I feel for you and I hope you have good docs and the condition is under control for the most part. Cannabis helps on several fronts for this disease: joint pain, nausea from both meds and GI involvement, lesion pain, inflammatory pain throughout the body. When I use cannabis I feel like a different human being. I become very mobile and enjoy moving around as the stiffness and pain almost melts away. I can eat large quantities of food and my stomach and intestines feel better. I prefer to use a vaporizer myself as there is nearly zero smell and there is ZERO smoke. I suggest it. I hope you live in a compassionate state though. Some people are so backwards that they would rather us suffer than get relief from cannabis. It is crazy.
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