By
Revealing
the legal changes, Home Secretary Sajid Javid said patients with
drug-resistant conditions will be allowed treatment with
cannabis-derived medicinal products, revealing that the drug would be
reclassified from schedule one to schedule two, The Guardian reported.
As is the case with the U.S. federal government,
the British government previously classified marijuana and its
derivatives alongside heroin and LSD. The new classification in the U.K.
recognizes that cannabis has medicinal value in some instances.
Citing recent cases involving sick children, Javid said that the
government’s previous “position on cannabis-related medicinal products
was not satisfactory,” according to the British newspaper.
“This
will help patients with an exceptional clinical need,” the secretary
said, but insisted that the decision in “no way” should be seen as “a
first step” toward legal recreational marijuana.
Many campaigners and activists welcomed the government’s decision.
Dr. Tom Freeman, a senior academic fellow at King's College London, told the BBC
that the decision would have a "substantial impact on research by
facilitating the development of safer and more effective medicines.”
Former
Justice Minister Sir Mike Penning also welcomed the announcement, but
pointed out that there are still many unanswered questions the
government must address about rescheduling cannabis.
"Any move to
restrict medical cannabis in the UK to a very narrow range of derived
products, each requiring full pharmaceutical trials, thereby blocking
out the many products available overseas, will lead to great
disappointment and be a missed opportunity,” Penning told the British
broadcaster.
Javid’s decision followed a high-profile campaign
surrounding the case of a 13-year-old boy named Billy Caldwell. The
young boy has a rare form of epilepsy and was granted a special license
to use medical marijuana, which helps him control his seizures, by
Northern Ireland’s Department of Health earlier this month.
“For the first time in months I’m almost lost for words, other than ‘thank-you Sajid Javid,’” Caldwell’s mother Charlotte said, according to The Independent,
pointing out that the news came on her son’s 13th birthday. “Never has
Billy received a better birthday present, and never from somebody so
unexpected,” she said.
Despite the landmark decision, using or
selling cannabis for recreational use will remain a serious criminal
offense in the country. Possession of the plant and its derivatives will
continue to carry an unlimited fine as well as up to five years in
jail, according to the British news site. Dealers will face up to 14
years in prison.
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