This Blog is about Cannabis, marijuana, weed, ganja.
Tuesday, 24 July 2018
Medical cannabis users could still be criminalised in UK despite government accepting its benefits
Alex Stevens
Cannabis is high on the agenda at the moment. Not only have California and Canada passed new laws
to legalise marijuana, but in the UK, two recent high profile medical
cases have forced the issue of medical cannabis right up to government
level.
The outcry over Billy Caldwell and Alfie Dingley
– two epileptic boys who rely on cannabis oil to control their seizures
– has led the UK government to accept that cannabis extracts may have medical benefits.
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs – the official body that advises the government – has since recommended that
some forms of cannabis should be allowed for medical uses. This means
that doctors might be able to prescribe them to patients. But the devil,
as always, is in the detail, and in practice, people who use cannabis
therapeutically will still be treated as criminals.
This is for two reasons. One is that the the council has only
recommended “rescheduling” some forms of cannabis. The other is that the
types of raw, organic cannabis that many people already use to treat
their own conditions will probably still be completely banned.
Drug control explained
In the UK, the Misuse of Drugs Regulations
include five schedules that categorise all the substances that are
controlled by the Misuse of Drugs Act. These schedules determine the
level of restriction applied to these substances.
Schedule one has the highest level of control. Drugs in this group –
which currently includes cannabis – are not considered to have any
medical benefit. And they cannot be possessed without a specific licence
from the Home Office. Schedule two substances can be possessed with a
prescription.
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs has recommended
that only substances which fit a definition of “cannabis-derived
medicinal products” be moved out of schedule one, and into schedule two.
It is possible that standardised whole-plant cannabis products – including those already sold in the Netherlands and in Canada
– might meet the definition. But this definition is to be written by
the Department of Health and Social Care and the Medicines and
Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). At the moment, the MHRA
has approved only one cannabis formulation, sold as Sativex. This has been through the full medicines approval process to be prescribed for the treatment of Multiple Sclerosis related muscle spasms. No other whole-plant cannabis products are approved as medicines in the UK.
The problems
The MHRA has already refused to grant approval for standardised cannabis extracts, such as cannabidiol
– sold as CBD oil – to be considered as a medicine. If this approach to
defining medicines were to remain, no cannabis products would be moved
to schedule two.
The Advisory Council’s reason for not moving other types of cannabis
out of schedule one is that it “should not be given the status of
medication”. But neither the Misuse of Drugs Act nor the schedules of
the Misuse of Drugs Regulations determine what a medication actually is –
this is done via UK and EU medicines legislation. Lots of people use cannabis to help them deal with chronic pain.Shutterstock
There is also the issue of whether schedule two is appropriate for
any form of cannabis. Other substances in this schedule include
morphine, diamorphine (heroin) and methadone. These can all kill by
overdose. This is why they are subject to the tight storage, recording
and reporting restrictions imposed by schedule two.
Cannabis is not lethal in overdose, and is also less harmful than other substances placed in schedule two. Some schedule three and four drugs – such as some benzodiazepines – and even some substances that are legally sold, such as alcohol, can kill by overdose.
Criminalising patients
If cannabis-based medicines are moved into schedule two, the costs
and bureaucracy involved will likely deter many doctors from
prescribing. But an even larger problem is that most people who use
organic cannabis for conditions including chronic pain, arthritis, the
side effects of chemotherapy and even the self-medication of brain and
other tumours, will continue to be criminalised. The clinical evidence
for some of these uses is stronger than for others. But some people report much greater benefits compared with pharmaceutical medicines, with less harmful side effects.
The decision to self medicate with cannabis is taken by adults who
have the right to make informed choices about their own lives. And as
the Home Office knows, criminalising possession is not backed up by evidence that it reduces the harms or use of cannabis. A recent report claimed legalisation
in the UK would reduce organised crime, improve the quality and safety
of cannabis and turn over £6.8 billion annually.Shutterstock
Current UK law, and recent recommendations err on the side of
caution, so people who use cannabis for medical benefit in the UK, will
continue to be criminalised. This is despite the fact that the medical
benefits of cannabis have now been accepted.
Of course, enabling people to benefit from substances with medical
properties, while also minimising the harms done by both drug use and
drug laws, is a complex balance to achieve. And it is clear that this is
going to be a balance that will require careful consideration of both
the criminal law and medicines regulations.
No comments:
Post a Comment