Thanks to Oregonians, veterans are one step closer to getting prescribed medical marijuana by their actual doctors.
By Lizzy Acker
And now for some happy news.
In April, we reported that Senator Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) helped pass an amendment to the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations Bill
that would "allow Veterans Health Administration (VA) doctors to
discuss and make recommendations about the use of medical marijuana with
their patients."
Now, Representative Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) has passed a similar
amendment to the same bill on the House floor. What this means is that
if the bill goes through with these amendments, in states where medical
cannabis is legal, veterans will be able to talk to their doctors about
it as a treatment option. (Currently, veterans have to hire a doctor
outside of the VA if they want to be prescribed medical marijuana.)
Quick U.S. government lesson: The Military Construction and Veterans
Affairs Appropriations Bill is a funding bill that must be approved
every year by the House and the Senate. Both houses go through the bill
separately, making amendments to it.
Then, the now two versions of the
bill go to a committee, which irons out the whole thing and creates one
bill using the amendments (Merkley is part of this committee
and Blumenauer is not). After that, both houses once again vote on the
bill. Phew.
This is the third time Representative Blumenauer has brought this
amendment to the House floor. In 2014, he lost 195 to 222. In 2015, he
lost 210 to 213. This year, the tables turned and he won 233 to 189.
When asked over the phone what changed this year, Blumenauer said that
nationally, perceptions about medical marijuana have changed. And also,
that the country is at a crisis point with opioid addiction.
"We've got a national problem," said Blumenauer over the phone. "It's worse for veterans."
"78 people a day die from opioid overdose—over 20,000 people last
year," Blumenauer added. "For veterans, opioid overdose rate is almost
twice the rate of the general population."
The amendment to the bill would mean VA doctors could talk to their
patients about using medical marijuana as an alternative to opioids for
treatment for pain and symptoms of PTSD. And this could have a big
impact on another killer of veterans as well: suicide.
"We lose veterans to suicide at a rate 50 percent higher than the
regular population," said Blumenauer. "We lose 22 veterans a day. It's
an epidemic."
"What we're doing now isn't working for them."
With public opinion changing more and more to be in favor of marijuana
as a viable alternative to pharmaceuticals, the facts that there is
similar language in both versions of the bill and that this year the
amendment passed with bipartisan support, Blumenauer feels good about
the prospect of this amendment making it into the final version of the
bill.
Blumenauer considers the vote today a victory for veterans. "It makes me smile," he says.
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