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US: Politics Trumps Science in FDA's Medical Marijuana Statement

Drug Policy Alliance News

Tuesday 25 Apr 2006

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The Food and Drug Administration released an advisory last week claiming
that marijuana has no medicinal value, ignoring a substantial body of
scientific evidence to the contrary.

This announcement contradicts a 1999 report by the Institute of
Medicine, the scientific arm of the National Academy of Science, which
said that marijuana has medical potential and should be tested in
clinical trials. This report was issued by a panel of independent
scientists and doctors who reviewed the body of scientific knowledge on
the subject. The FDA statement, on the other hand, did not refer to any
new science to support its claim.

The announcement is the latest example of an ongoing, politically-driven
effort to block marijuana from medical use. In its advisory, FDA claimed
that "no sound scientific studies supported medical use of marijuana for
treatment in the United States." However, private research efforts
around marijuana have been chilled by a Drug Enforcement Administration
policy that keeps production of marijuana for research under government
monopoly. Adequate competition in the manufacture of Schedule I drugs -
such as marijuana - to be used for research purposes is actually
required by law, and clinical trials would be necessary for an
evaluation for possible FDA approval. The current DEA restrictions on
research marijuana do not exist for any other drug.

DPA executive director Ethan Nadelmann said, "It is shameful to see the
FDA talking out of both sides of its mouth on this issue by declaring
there is no sound research on the medical benefits of medical marijuana
but at the same time, denying researchers the opportunity to study the
efficacy of cannabis."

Shortly before last week's FDA announcement, the Department of Health
and Human Services postponed for the third time its response to an
appeal from Americans for Safe Access, which is seeking corrections to
erroneous claims the department has made about medical marijuana. These
claims include the assertion that marijuana "has no currently accepted
medical use in treatment in the United states." HHS has said it needs
more time to review the issue - a position contradicted in the
unqualified condemnation by FDA, which is part of HHS. The FDA advisory
does not address this discrepancy at all

This inconsistency and the blocking of research on the part of the
federal government make clear that this anti-medical marijuana stance is
driven by ideology, not science. "It is a real problem when our system
for evaluating drug safety is dictated by politics rather than facts,"
said Bill Piper, DPA's director of national affairs. "Public health is
too important to be at the mercy of politicians who overlook or
discourage research just because it might yield results they don't agree
with."

 

 

 

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