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- From: jkp@cs.HUT.FI (Jyrki Kuoppala)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Re: dronabinol (Bush on THC)
- Message-ID: <1991Nov4.003229.18928@nntp.hut.fi>
- Date: 4 Nov 91 00:32:29 GMT
-
- In article <9971@spdcc.SPDCC.COM>, dyer@spdcc (Steve Dyer) writes:
- >No doctor in hir right mind is going to prescribe a C-II drug for any
- >purpose other that one which is generally accepted by the medical profession,
- >and glaucoma isn't such an indication. That's a simple fact.
-
- A quote from the July 6-12, 1991 issue of the Economist, reproduced
- without permission (thanks to Gary Condon for posting this earlier):
-
- Drugs can be medicinal or recreational: marijuana is both. For nearly
- 20 years advocates of its medicinal use- to relieve the nausea of
- chemotherapy, to treat glaucoma and to help AIDS patients gain weight-
- have fought in the American courts to have the drug reclassified so
- that doctors can prescribe it. Currently marijuana is grouped with the
- most disapproved of drugs, such as LSD and heroin. The government
- argues it must remain so because it has no "currently accepted medical
- use in treatment". A new study by researchers at Harvard refutes this.
- Mainly because of its effectiveness in treating the vomiting
- common among cancer patients during chemotherapy, tetrahydrocannibinol
- (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, was approved for
- medical use in America in 1985. A synthetic form of THC is sold in
- pill form under the trade name Marinol; last year almost 100,000 doses
- were prescribed. Smokable marijuana, however, is available to just 34
- people through a "compassionate use" programme. To the confusion of
- many a police officer, these patients are given a supply of marijuana
- cigarettes rolled by government hands at a research farm in
- Mississippi.
- Proponents claim that smoking marijuana works better than
- taking oral THC. In 1988 Francis Young, a judge who examines
- administrative issues for the Drug Enforcement Agency, recommended
- that marijuana be reclassified on the ground that "current acceptance"
- of a drug is present if a "respectable minority" of doctors endorse
- it. The administration disagreed, claiming that the vast majority of
- doctors believe oral THC is as reliable and effective as smokable
- marijuana and produces fewer side-effects.
- Enter Rick Doblin and Mark Kleiman, two drug-policy
- researchers at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. To test the
- administrations thesis, they conducted a random survey of members of
- the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Some 1,035 responded, about
- 10% of America's oncologists. The results, published in the July 1st
- issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, surprised even Mr. Doblin
- and Mr. Kleiman; nearly half of the respondents said they would
- prescribe smokable marijuana if it were legal. Indeed 44% of them said
- they had, in effect, done so already by recommending it to one or more
- of their patients, despite the possibility of prosecution.
- Nearly two-thirds of the oncologists agreed that marijuana was
- an effective anti-emetic, while 77% of the 157 who expressed a
- preference said that smokable marijuana is more effective than oral
- THC. A majority said that marijuana was no worse than Marinol in terms
- of producing bad side-effects.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: Jim Rosenfield <jnr@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Date: 23 Oct 93 11:32 PDT
- Subject: Docs report MJ Recommendatns
- Message-ID: <1484000379@cdp>
-
- From: Jim Rosenfield <jnr>
- Subject: Docs report MJ Recommendatns
-
- From vicka@wrq.com Thu Oct 7 16:32:32 1993
- From: the Littlest Orc <vicka@wrq.com>
- Organization: Walker Richer & Quinn, Inc., Seattle, WA
-
-
-
- AU Doblin-R-E. Kleiman-M-A.
- IN Kennedy School of Government, Cambridge, MA 02138.
- TI Marijuana as antiemetic medicine: a survey of oncologists'
- experiences and attitudes [see comments]
- CM Comment in: J-Clin-Oncol. 1991 Nov. 9(11). P 2079-80.
- SO J-Clin-Oncol. 1991 Jul. 9(7). P 1314-9.
- LG eng.
- PT journal-article.
- AB A random-sample, anonymous survey of the members of the American
- Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) was conducted in spring 1990
- measuring the attitudes and experiences of American oncologists
- concerning the antiemetic use of marijuana in cancer chemotherapy
- patients. The survey was mailed to about one third (N = 2,430) of all
- United States-based ASCO members and yielded a response rate of 43%
- (1,035). More than 44% of the respondents report recommending the
- (illegal) use of marijuana for the control of emesis to at least one
- cancer chemotherapy patient. Almost one half (48%) would prescribe
- marijuana to some of their patients if it were legal. As a group,
- respondents considered smoked marijuana to be somewhat more effective
- than the legally available oral synthetic dronabinol ([THC] Marinol;
- Unimed, Somerville, NJ) and roughly as safe. Of the respondents who
- expressed an opinion, a majority (54%) thought marijuana should be
- available by prescription. These results bear on the question of
- whether marijuana has a "currently accepted medical use," at issue in
- an ongoing administrative and legal dispute concerning whether
- marijuana in smoked form should be available by prescription along
- with synthetic THC in oral form. This survey demonstrates that
- oncologists' experience with the medical use of marijuana is more
- extensive, and their opinions of it are more favorable, than the
- regulatory authorities appear to have believed.
- MJ ANTIEMETICS: tu. ANTINEOPLASTIC-AGENTS: ae.
- ATTITUDE-OF-HEALTH-PERSONNEL. CANNABIS. MEDICAL-ONCOLOGY.
- NAUSEA: pc. NEOPLASMS: dt. VOMITING: pc.
- MN HUMAN. NAUSEA: ci. QUESTIONNAIRES. RANDOM-ALLOCATION.
- UNITED-STATES. VOMITING: ci.
- RN 0 Antiemetics. 0 Antineoplastic-Agents.
-
-
-