home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- From: esrec@csv.warwick.ac.uk (Mr C L Mountford)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Newspaper article on Cannabis(pro!!!!)
- Date: 30 Sep 1993 18:36:20 +0100
- Message-ID: <28f5ek$4h@sage.csv.warwick.ac.uk>
-
- Here's an article that appeared in the Guardian Newspaper on 18/9/93. It is
- copied without permission. Most typos are mine.
- Read and Enjoy
- Please remember that this article was written in the UK all comments in() are
- mine.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- INSIDE STORY
-
- MEDICINE, MAN
-
- Since the Thirties cannabis has been taboo demonised as a stepping stone to
- hard drugs. Yet for centuries it was a respected medicine. Now, people with
- ailments from multiple sclerosis to glaucoma are clamouring for pot on
- prescription. Could marijuana be a wonder drug for the Nineties?
- ALEX KERSHAW investigates.
-
- "When I first took it the effects were dramatic. It was a god-send. It's
- help with my spasticity, my bladder, taken away my head sweats and gives me
- a much better night's sleep." A year ago, 43-year-old David McGill was
- suffering chronic pain. Depressed and insomniac, he had sunk to his lowest
- point since being diagnosed with multiple sclerocis in 1983. Then, last
- November he heard about cannabis. He is just one of hundreds, maybe thousands,
- who now use the drug regularly as a treatment for MS and all sorts of other
- debilitating diseases.
- Despite widespread use for thousands of years, cannabis's secret
- medical history is only now being rediscovered in this country, thanks in part
- to those battling against diseases for which there is no known cure. Yet from
- 1842 to 1900, cannabis made up half of all the medicine sold in America.
- Robert Burton the English clergyman, first recommended cannabis for depression
- in the Anatomy of Melancholy, published in 1621. Queen Victoria used it to
- alleviate period pains.
- A hundred odd years later, the use or supply of cannabis is, of course,
- illegal. Next month, a Merseyside GP (General Practitioner) is due to appear
- at Liverpool Crown Court charged under the Misuse of Drugs Act, 1971. It is
- likely to be a test case about the supply of cannabis out of medical necessity.
- The case is the first of its kind in this country, but there have been many
- similair presented in American courts.
- Although the US Surgeon General, Jocelyn Elders, supports cannabis for
- therapeutic use, the medical profession remains bitterly divided over cannabis.
- Its political potency, it seems, is as intoxicating as ever. And far more is
- at stake than possible legalisation. The arguments over cannabis are also
- about the efficacy of modern medicine, the futility of the government's war
- on drugs and even the ecology of the planet itself.
- Most evidence of cannabis's therapeutic value come from America.
- Marihuana: The Forbidden Medicine, for example written by Dr Lester Grinspoon,
- Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard medical school, includes moving
- personal accounts of how cannabis has alleviated epilepsy, the weight loss of
- Aids, the nausea of chemotherapy, menstrual pains and multiple sclerosis.
- Several glaucoma sufferers have found that using cannabis had lowered the
- pressure within the eye, so averting the onset of blindness. Robert Randall is
- one of them. In 1975, steep street prices drove him to grow cannabis plants
- in his Washington home "just eight blocks from Capitol Hill" to treat his
- glaucoma. He was arrested, acquitted and then sued the American government to
- obtain the first legal supply of cannabis in the United States.
- "My defence was actually derived from English common law," recalls
- Randall. "Thirty five US states have allowed the medical use of marihuana. In
- opinion polls, 80 per cent of Americans support marijuana on prescription."
- Now president of the US alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, Randall was told
- in 1972 that his sight would last three years. Today his glaucoma is no worse.
- A handful of patients with cancer or suffering chronic pain have also
- won access. In 1990, a man known as Steve L becam the first Aids patient to
- obtain the drug legally, 10 days before he died. The same year, Aids patients
- Kenny Jenks and his wife, Barbra, won the same right following their arrest
- for possesing two cannabis plants. Ten armed narcotics officers had broken
- down the door to their trailer home and held a gun to Barbra Jenks's head.
- Then, in 1991, James O Mason, head of America's Public Health Service,
- suspended the programme which allowed the Jenkses and others cannabis on
- compassionate grounds. Robert Randall, who recieves a tin box every month
- crammed with 300 joints (!), is one of only nine people in the US permitted a
- legal supply grown on the US governments's marijuana plot at the University
- of Mississipi.
- "We let doctors decide every day whether we are allowed to take morphine
- and all kinds of dangerous drugs," said Kenneth Jenks before he died on
- July 19. "The decision to take marijuane should be between the doctor and the
- patient"
- Jenks's sentiments are echoed by many in this country. Sufferers from
- various ailments are turning to cannabis, often in the last resort and in
- preference to legally prescribed, sometimes highly toxic, drugs. Many
- suffering manic depressive order, for example, complain the lithium carbonate
- robs them of their creativity and vitality to the extent that they stop
- taking it despite the potentially serious consequences. Cannabis, for some,
- has proved an effective substitute. And for MS sufferes, in particular, Dr
- Lester Grinspoon insists, "cannabis is the drug of necessity." Desperate for
- relief, many swear it helps to alleviate muscle spasms and other symptons.
- "It has completely changed my life," says Elizabeth MacRory, who is 51 years
- old. Diagnosed as having MS in 1986 after a car accident, MacRory was told
- "go home and get used to it and don't read any books." "Sometimes I joke that
- I'll be the first woman in prison in a wheelchair," she says. "Cannabis has
- criminalised me but also liberated me. It has helped with muscle spasms,
- allowed me to sleep properly and helped control my bladder."
- Clare Hodges , a 36-year-old mother of two, who has coped with MS for 10
- years, reports similair results. She runs the British Association of Cannabis
- Therapeutics from her home in Leeds. "I now wake up in the morning and my
- balance is sensational. I've been prescribed alll sorts of medicines. Most of
- the time I felt I was being overdrugged, but with cannabis you can really
- regulate the dosage. So-called experts are always quick to point to the
- side-effects. But if you read about the possible effects of aspirin, you'd
- never take it again," she says, lighting a joint containing herbal tobacco.
- MacRory, Hodges, McGill and other MS sufferers, who claim considerable
- benefit from cannabis, are increasingly disaffected with the charity
- representing their interests, the Multiple Sclerosis Society. Hodges points
- to the memorandum on cannabis use issued by the Society in which John Walford,
- its general secretary, asserts that "there is no evidence that this agent has
- an effect on people with MS." Walford also claimed that "long-term use may be
- associated with significant, serious side effects." This contradicts
- Therapeutic Claims in MS, published by the International Federation of MS
- Societies, which concludes that "no significant side effects were reported in
- the limited trials" and "no serious long-term effects have been proven to
- result from the drug."
- When pressed, Walford concedes, "The society would welcome properly
- conducted trials into any substance that is thought to be helpful, but there
- are 80,000 people with MS in the UK. What you are talking about is a small
- minority. There are people who will swear by all manner of things."
- "He [Walford] thinks we all just get high," counters Elizabeth MacRory
- with some bitterness. "He says there are 'significant side effects associated
- with long-term cannabis use' yet the Society fails to inform the membership
- of the toxic effects of drugs with no proven efficacy which neurologists
- continue to prescribe."
- "Cannabis is one of humanity's oldest medicines, with a remarkable
- record of both safety and efficacy," insists Dr Lester Grinspoon whose
- unflinching advocacy of cannabis caused a storm in America and even led to
- death threats, "I'd like to see the day when full medical potential of cannabis
- is recognised," he says. "Then it will be seen in the same light as other so-
- called wonderdrugs: penicillin, aspirin and insulin. People will look back and
- ask how people could have been so blind. There is no plant with so many
- therapeutic qualities. It's one of the safest drugs known to mankind."
- Far from being a potential "wonderdrug", it has been claimed that
- cannabis causes birth defects, hormonal imbalances resulting in males growing
- breasts, impaired sperm and egg production as well as impotence, frigidity,
- cancer and brain damage. None of these claims has yet been supported by
- scientific evidence. An estimated 10,000 studies worldwide and hundreds
- conducted by the US gorvernment between 1966-76 to back its policy of
- prohibition, have shown that cannabis, even when smoked in huge quantities, is
- relatively benign. The spaced-out pot-head, permanently brain damaged after
- countless tokes on a "Camberwell carrot", is a figment of what Grinspoon calls
- "Psycopharmacological McCarthyism".
- As all regular users know - and the Home Office estimated that there
- were 1.5 million in the UK in 1991, and new figures to be published later this
- month are likely to put the total higher - cannabis does have well-known side-
- effects: attention and short-term memory, tracking and co-ordination can be
- impaired. But not permanently.
- The only well-confirmed negative effect of marijuana, according to
- Grinspoon, is caused by the smoke, which contains three times more tars and
- five times more carbon monoxide than tobacco. But even the heaviest marijuana
- smokers rarely use as much as an average tobacco smoker. And, of course, many
- prefer to eat it.
- "Cannabis does have therapeutic properties," admits Dr Heather Ashton,
- Professor of Clinical Psychopharmacology at Newcastle University, "but at the
- cost, in my view, of unacceptable side-effects. I'm not convinced that it
- can be any more therapeutic than other drugs which don't have the risks or
- that the advantages of cannabis outweigh its disadvantages compared to other
- drugs."
- Also a leading expert on cannabis, Professor Ashton points to the
- "marked increase in heart rate" caused by marijuana, which, she insists, "can
- precipitate heart attacks in people with cardiac diseases." She stresses that
- marijuana does cause "amotivational syndrome" when consumed - "it take away
- the desire to do anything because you feel good." It has, in some rare cases,
- also triggered psychotic episodes.
- Dr Roger Pertwee, Secretary of the International Cannabis Research
- Society and the UK's pre-eminent cannabis expert, sees himself as occupying
- the middle ground on the cannabis debate. "Cannabis does seem to be as
- effective, if not better, than existing drugs in dealing with spasticity and
- bladder problems of multiple sclerosis. The side-effects seem to be more
- tolerable for some patients," he says. "Clinical trials have all backed
- cannabis in being able to, not cure, but suppress some of the symptons.
- Migraine could well be another case."
- As a recreational drug, alongside nicotine, alcohol and even caffeine,
- Dr Pertwee concedes that cannabis compares favourably. No human fatalities have
- as yet been recorded as a result of marijuana. Withdrawal symptons have been
- reported in long-term chronic users in Jamaica and Costa Rica, but they do not
- appear to be dependent in the damaging sense that others are to, say, alcohol
- and tranquillisers.
- Much effort has also been devoted to proving the "stepping-stone
- hypothesis" that marijuana smoking leads to the use of dangerous drugs. In
- Holland, laws passed in 1976 established a division between hard and soft
- drugs, effectively decriminalising, with strict conditions, the possesion and
- supply of cannabis. The Lancet report in 1989: "The Dutch have shown that
- there is nothing inevitable about the drugs ladder in which soft drugs lead
- to hard drugs. The ladder does not exist in Holland because the dealers have
- been separated."
- The most exhaustive recent investigation into cannabis occured in America
- between 1986 and 1988, when the Drug Enforcement Administration heard
- evidence from doctors, patients and studied thousands of pages of
- documentation. The conclusion reached by the DEA's administrative judge,
- Francis J Young, makes startling reading: "Nearly all medicines have toxic,
- potentially lethal effects," declared Young, "But marijuana is not such a
- substance . . . Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest active
- substances know to man. By any measure of rational analysis marijuana can be
- safely used within a supervised routine of medical care."
- Given cannabis's medical potential, why was it criminalised at all?
- Jack Here, author of The Emperor Wears No Clothes, has constructed a powerful
- thesis to explain cannabis's fall from favour earlier this century,
- culminating in the 1937 Marijuana Tax in America. Cannabis, also known as hemp
- , is a prolificm fast-growing crop, useful for a wide range of industrial
- purposes, and an economical source of fuel: it threatened to bankrupt the
- paper industry, destroy an emerging synthetic fibre industry and even
- challenge the dominance of oil companies.
- In Harry Anslinger, head of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, imperilled
- interests in America found a messianic ally, "If the hideous monster
- Frankenstein came face to face with the monster marijuana he would drop dead
- of fright," railed Anslinger. Through a rash of B movies such as Reefer
- Madness, Anslinger managed to convince the American public that cannabis
- caused violent crimes and accelerated Uncle Sam's moral decline. Cannabis
- still unnerves a powerful axis of interests. Many of the 4,000-odd "Families
- Against Marijuana"-style organisations in the US are funded by the tobacco,
- pharmaceutical and alcohol lobbies. Cannabis revisionists now view the
- Marijuana Tax as an ecologocial crime. "We want the establishment to
- acknowledge that the reasons cannabis became illegal in the first place was
- because of the threat posed by it's commercial applications. not its use as a
- drug," says Andy Waller of the UK-based House of Hemp, set up this year to
- promote cannabis's commercial use. Until the late 19th century, says Waller,
- cannabis was one of the world's main agricultural crops.
- Today, it has an estimated 50,000 non-smoking commercial uses. According
- to the US Department of Agriculture research, hemp has four times as much
- cellulose fibre suitable for making paper as wood pulp. The original Levi's
- jeans were, in fact, 100 per cent hemp/ others claim that cultivating
- marijuana in the Third World would save the rainforest purify the atmosphere
- and provide autonomy to Third World economies crippled by debt.
- In tacit recognition of marijhuana's (sic(sp?)) profit potential, in
- February, the Home Offive granted commercial licences to permit the
- cultivation of 1,505 acres of cannabis in the UK. It is, however, unsmokeable,
- containing none of the psychoactive ingredient THC. The first crop is now
- being harvested.
- In the Seventies, Dr Raphael Mechoulam, who first isolated THC at the
- University of Tel Aviv in 1964, predicted that marijuana would become a major
- medicine by the mid-Eighties, replacing 10 to 20 per cent of all prescription
- medicines. Dr Grinspoon argues that, since cannabis is inexpensive, it could
- significantly reduce health service's enormous drugs bills.
- Used to combat stress, the world's number one killer, cannabis could
- also curtail or replace hugely-profitable drugs such as Valium, Librium and,
- indeed, alcohol, Grinspoon believes. "I'm convinced," he says, " that
- cannibidiol (one of 60 therapeutic compounds isolated in cannabis) will be the
- best sleeping medicine and one of the best anti-anxiety drugs with the least
- toxic side-effects."
- Cannabidiol, which does not produce a high, could also possibly alleviate
- Britains's most serious drug problem: tranquiliser abuse, which is already
- responsible for more emergency hospital admissions than all illegal drugs
- combined. "Cannabidiol could do all these things," concurs Professor Ashton.
- "But not at any less cost than other drugs, in my opinion."
- At grass-roots level, cannabis's rehabilitation also reflects a growing
- disaffection with orthodox medicine, borne out by the Nineties' boom in
- alternative medicine. A common complaint, aired by MS sufferers in particular,
- is that cannibidiol research has been woefully neglected. However, despite
- decades of marginalisation, there have been spectacular breakthroughs. Pertwee
- points to the recent discovery of anandamide (reported in a recent New
- Scientist), a substance produced by the brain that behaves like marijuana.
- "Anandamide's discovery promises to open a door to how the brain works. There
- may be possibilities of working on a memory drug and the treatment of
- Alzheimer's disease."
- The exploitation of cannabis's medical benefits has always been limited
- because of it's psychoactive properties. The holy grail of cannabinoid
- therapeutics has, therefore, been to eliminate cannabis's high. Drug companies
- have spent years trying, without success. But now, the discovery in Cambridge
- (discussed in this month's Nature) by Dr Sean Munro of a receptor for THC, not
- in the brain, but in peripheral tissues, promise to solve this problem.
- Pharmaceutical companies have already expressed an interest in Munro's
- findings, particularly as related to glaucoma. Yet it is the receptors in the
- brain, points out Munro, "that are responsible for many of cannabis's
- potential therapeutic effects." And it is precisely the euphoria induced by
- marijuana which makes it such an attractive drug for those with terminal
- illnesses.
- According to Andy Waller, marijuana should "theoretically" cost less per
- acre than wheat to grow. Yet Nabilone, the only synthetic cannabinoid legally
- prescribed in the UK, costs the NHS [National Health Service] 39.70 [pounds
- about 60-70 dollars?] for twenty capsules. "The pharmaceutical industry and
- regulatory system are addicted to the cult of synthesis," complains Robert
- Randall. "It's as if every drug has to come out of a factory. God forbid that
- it might be natural. There's an attitude that man can make a better Garden Of
- Eden scientifically."
- In fact, Dr Grinspoon doubts whether synthetic compounds would be as
- effective as the natural substance. "It's the synergy of so many cannabinoids
- in natural marijuana which may be the secret to it's wide-ranging properties,"
- says Grinspoon. However, he doubts whether straightforward cannabis will become
- a prescription drug. As a plant, cannabis cannot be patented and is therefore
- an uncommercial proposition for the drug companies. Legalised prescription
- would also need to cope with the problems of standardisation and leakage on to
- the market. "There would be queues outside every GP's office," jokes Mike
- Goodman of Release, the national drugs and legal advice service.
- "If you can get marijuana for $10 an ounce from your doctor rather than
- $600 on the street," says Grinspoon, "it's obvious why prescription won't
- work. Cannabis must be given the same status as alcohol - legal, with
- appropriate limitations, for use by adults for any purpose."
- Robert Randall echoes others in vehemently disagreeing with Grinspoon's
- call for general legalisation. "The idea that sick people are the key to
- decriminalisation is to hold the welfare of the ill hostage to reformist
- fantasies. We want it on prescription, like morphine, to help people. Not so
- that a hippie can have a good time in the afternoon." [selfish tosser]
- Once deemed the weed that propgated flowerpower, the subversive dropout's
- favoured intoxicant, marijuana has since moved mainstream. It is no longer the
- narcotic of youthful rebellion for baby-boomers of non-inhaler Bill Clinton's
- generation. Mike Goodman insists more people now roll joints and eat hash
- brownies than attend football [soccer] matches, art galleries or church. A
- survey to be published by two Manchester criminologists next month suggests
- that close to 50 per cent of teenagers aged 14-16 in urban areas use illicit
- drugs regularly [does this include alcohol underage?], most commonly cannabis.
- According to Peter McDermott, editor of the International Journal On Drug
- Policy: "Cannabis can no longer be regarded as deviant activity. It's part of
- our national social life."
- In a recent survey at a leading teaching hospital, the results of which
- one source admits to being asked to suppress, "over 60 per cent of medical
- students were found to be marijuana users." In the same survey, only 30 per
- cent admitted to smoking cigarettes.
- Even senior police officers, such as Commander John Grieve of the
- Metropolitan Police, have proposed licensing a network of drug suppliers and
- dealers. Brian Hilliard, editor of Police Review, has called for the
- legalisation of cannabis for several years. "Legalising cannabis wouldn't do
- any harm to anybody," he says "We should be concentrating on the serious
- business of heroin and amphetamines."
- The conviction of 42,209 people in 1991 on marijuana charges contributes
- to the clogging of the courts and the overcrowding of prisons. Almost 90 per
- cent of drug offences involve cannabis. Yet the British government spends
- 500 million pounds [750,000,000 dollars approx?] a year on "overall responses
- to drugs (international and national)" and receives no tax revenue from the
- UK's estimated 1.8 billion pound [2.7 billion dollars?] illicit drugs market.
- Increasingly, those pressing for marijuana's legalisation mirror
- Grinspoon's belief that, "since scientific scepticism of marijuana has all but
- collapsed", the chief opposition to cannabis rests on a moral and political,
- not toxicological, foundation.
- The real damage that cannabis causes, the argument goes, is to the body
- politic. In his recent book, Food Of The Gods, Terence McKenna neatly
- encapsulates dope's lasting social potentcy: "It (cannabis) dimishes the power
- of ego, has a mitigating effect on competition. causes one to question
- authority, and reinforces the notion of merely relative importance of social
- values."
- "It's clear that the government's war on drugs takes precedence over
- medical rationality," says Nick Partridge of the Terrence Higgins Trust [A
- national UK charity dealing with AIDS (I think)]. "At present we're
- criminalising many people in massive pain at the end of their lives. Yet I
- don't expect the medical arguments to break through the political dogma
- surrounding marijuana and that is deeply regrettable."
- "Marijuana has empowered many sick people for the first time," says
- Robert Randall. "For many, it is the only drug that works. The real problem
- with marijuana is perhaps it threatens to put people in charge of their own
- medical lives. The question is: who is going to control individual's biology
- - large corporations, doctors and governments, or people themselves?"
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- My heartfelt thanks go out to ALEX KERSHAW who wrote this interesting and
- revealing article for the Guardian Newspaper
- Questions, Comments and mail would be much appreciated.
- BTW it took me fucking ages to type this in.
- "Shall we take a trip down memory lane,
- Head in the clouds into the acid rain,
- Time means nothing I can smell the trees,
- Tastin' the rainbows and the summer breeze." Northside
- xxxColxxx
-
-
-