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Tuesday, 16 June 2015
Medical marijuana: Patients 'suffering' as UK government urged to rethink cannabis reclassification
'All this could change by moving cannabisto Schedule 1 ... thus recognising the medicinal value of the drug'Getty Images
By
Sean Martin
A
report from one of Britain's leading experts on the benefits on medical
marijuana has urged the British government to relax the laws regarding
medicinal use of the drug.
Val Curran, professor of Psychopharmacology at University College
London, along with co-author Frank Warburton, says British patients are
"suffering unnecessarily" with medicinal marijuana not being made
available to them.
The report adds patients with conditions such as multiple sclerosis, spinal cord damage, epilepsy, chronic neuropathic pain,
chronic pain following shingles, the side effects of chemotherapy for
cancer, and those with a spate of other ailments are being denied
effective treatment.
Curran said: "Patients are suffering unnecessarily and others in
great pain are travelling abroad to find the cannabis they need to ease
their symptoms.
All this could change by moving cannabis from Schedule 1
to Schedule 2, thus recognising the medicinal value of the drug. Such a
change would also free up research and lead to new medicines for
chronic pain, and disease."
Under UK medical regulation, if a drug is in Schedule 1, it is deemed
that there are no medicinal benefits to it in spite of the mounting
evidence of the possible treatments and pain-killing effects of
cannabis. Even heroin is in Schedule 2.
It means the UK is going against the grain when compared with other
leading nations such as Canada, the Netherlands, Israel and over 20
states in the US, where herbal cannabis for medical use can be grown
under licensed conditions. Germany and Switzerland allow it to be
imported from the Netherlands for medicinal purposes.
The report also highlights the fiscal benefits the UK is missing out
on. For example, Sativex, the only cannabis derivative available legally
in the UK, costs £7,500 per year, with the authors adding "there is
extremely limited availability" of this. Bediol, which is a strain of
cannabis used as a medicine, costs just a fraction of this at £1,062.15
per annum.
The report concludes: "A logical first step in policy change would be
to take cannabis out of schedule 1 and place it in Schedule 2. Schedule
2 status would greatly facilitate research on the medical uses of
cannabis, thus stimulating UK medical research into the drug and its
constituents.
"An adjustment to the current UK control regime to give patients the
right to medication that they believe works for them is unlikely to have
any wider impact on the level of recreational cannabis use."
No upsurge in adolescents' use
Meanwhile, allowing the use of medicinal cannabis has not led to an
upsurge in the numbers of adolescents using it in the US, says new
research.
There are 23 states and the District of Columbia where the use of
medicinal cannabis has been approved. In several other states,
recreational use is also legal.
Despite believing that this would lead to a rise in use among
teenagers, research carried out by Dr Deborah Hasin, professor of
epidemiology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York, and her
colleagues dismissed these concerns, according to their paper in the journal Lancet Psychiatry.
After analysing data from a national study called Monitoring the
Future, which collects information from 50,000 pupils aged 13 to 18
every year, they found there had not been a rise in use.
Dr Hasin said: "Our findings provide the strongest evidence to date
that marijuana use by teenagers does not increase after a state
legalises medical marijuana. Rather, up to now, in the states that
passed medical marijuana laws, adolescent marijuana use was already
higher than in other states."
Pro-cannabis campaigners gathered at a '420 Day Celebration' at the Hyde Park in London in support of legalising the drug(Flickr/ CC)
She added: "Because early adolescent use of marijuana can lead to
many long-term harmful outcomes, identifying the factors that actually
play a role in adolescent use should be a high research priority."
Dr Kevin Hill, from the division of alcohol and drug abuse at McLean
Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts, wrote: "Perhaps the main concern of
many people opposed to medical marijuana laws is that they will lead to
increased general marijuana use, including among adolescents.
"Hasin and colleagues postulated, as many would, that the passage of
medical marijuana laws would increase adolescent marijuana use by
contributing to the declining perception of the potential harms of
marijuana. Their well-designed, methodologically sound study showed that
this was not the case."
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