Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Cannabis medicine is implicated in death of pensioner

Richard Irving

The Times

Saturday 17 Dec 2005

---
A CORONER raised fresh fears over the link between the use of cannabis
and mental problems yesterday after he ruled that an experimental
medicine derived from marijuana plants was linked to the development of
an illness that killed a pensioner suffering from severe diabetes.

At the end of a week-long inquest into the death of Rene Anderson, a
former supermarket superviser, Chris Dorries, the coroner, told the
court in Sheffield that the drug, known as Sativex, was a "significant
contributory factor" in Mrs Anderson's failing health.

Mrs Anderson, of Frecheville, was prescribed Sativex to ease pain and
numbness of the limbs caused by an extreme form of diabetes. The court
heard that hours after taking her first dose Mrs Anderson developed
disturbed behaviour. Four weeks later she was admitted to hospital in a
"confused and intoxicated" state.

The inquest, which could delay development of cannabis-based medicines,
heard that Mrs Anderson's physical condition continued to decline in
hospital. She died five months later of acute kidney failure.

The coroner said that it was still unclear as to why her condition
worsened after she was admitted and taken off the drug. He conceded that
there were no scientific grounds to connect Sativex to her continued
illness after she stopped taking the drug, but added that he could see
no other reason for the deterioration in her health.

GW Pharmaceuticals, the maker of Sativex, has been trying for years to
prove that the cannabis-based spray can help to relieve severe pain in
the nerve endings, muscle spasms and even sleep deprivation.

A spokesman for the company insisted that the verdict would not raise
safety fears over the treatment. "While the case is very sad by its
nature, we do not believe it raises any additional concerns over the use
of Sativex," he said, adding that more than 2,000 people had tested
Sativex over the course of its development and no one had died during that.


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!