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UK: Experts pass the buck on regrading of cannabis

Greg Hurst and Nigel Hawkes

The Times

Monday 12 Dec 2005

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MINISTERS face a dilemma over the legal status of cannabis after a
government review ducked the question of whether it should be
reclassified and targeted with renewed priority by police.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which has reassessed the
Government's decision of two years ago to downgrade cannabis, has backed
away from recommending that cannabis be reclassified from a class C to a
class B drug. Its report has been submitted to Charles Clarke, the Home
Secretary, and he will reflect on it over the Christmas recess before
reaching a decision early next year, according to one of his aides.

The end of the review comes as an inquest opens into the death of a
woman who had been taking part in trials of an experimental
cannabis-based drug. Rene Anderson, 70, was given Sativex to ease
symptoms of diabetic neuropathy, a generalised nerve pain in her hands
and feet, Richard Starkie, her family's solicitor, said yesterday.

Mr Starkie said that Mrs Anderson developed psychosis shortly after
taking the drug, but GW Pharmaceuticals, the makers of Sativex, insist
that the drug has been "well-tolerated" by patients in extensive trials,
and that they were "surprised and disappointed" that Mr Starkie had
pre-empted the coroner's findings.

Mrs Anderson was admitted to the Royal Hallamshire Hospital in Sheffield
on March 3 last year, and died ten weeks later after developing
pneumonia and kidney failure. Mr Starkie said: "The inquest will look at
whether her psychosis was caused by her taking the cannabis-based drug
and whether that psychosis then led to her physical decline and death."

Mrs Anderson's daughter, Jackie Sadler, said: "We are still in the dark
as to how she became so ill and why she died, and none of the medical
experts involved has yet been able to answer our questions."

The drug has not been granted a marketing authorisation by the Medicines
and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency and doctors can prescribe it
only on a named-patient basis. There was speculation yesterday that the
advisory council has concluded that health risks do not justify the
reclassification of cannabis.

Its failure to make a firm re-commendation means that Mr Clarke must
take a political decision without the option of simply endorsing the
findings of a group of experts. He set up the review weeks before the
general election, asking the council to advise him on scientific
research into the effects of stronger varieties of "skunk" cannabis.
This neutralised political rows over cannabis during the election.

Senior Home Office officials believe that public debate on drugs has
become "trapped" on the question of legalisation and would welcome
clarity on the status of cannabis, but police chiefs have urged keeping
the law as it is and said that, if cannabis is reclassified as a class B
drug, its possession should be enforced with a fixed penalty notice in
order not to divert police officers' time.

The original decision to downgrade the classification of cannabis was
taken by David Blunkett, the previous Home Secretary, and was again
based on a report by the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs. Mr
Clarke asked the council to look at the issue again in light of studies
into links between the regular use of cannabis and mental illness

 

 

 

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