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Brunei: Cannabis, then and now

The Brunei Times

Monday 09 Oct 2006

---
HEMP, from which marijuana and hashish are made, is notorious as a
`gateway drug' even though cannabis, its botanical name, is one of the
oldest medicinal plants in human history.

``Cannabis was used in traditional Chinese and Indian medicine to treat
nervous disorders, sleeplessness, vomiting and inflammation,'' noted
Ursula Sellerberg, a pharmacist in Berlin.

In Germany, the only cannabis product now legally available is
Dronabinol, whose active ingredient is a partly synthetic derivative of
hemp. Pharmacies can make capsules with the ingredient for people who
have a doctor's prescription. In addition, medicines containing
Dronabinol can be obtained legally from outside Germany via German
pharmacies. ``Cannabinoids represent a significant gain for pain
therapy,'' said Thomas Nolte, vice president of the German Pain Therapy
Association. Scientific studies have proven their effectiveness in
treating many ailments, particularly chronic pain and neurological diseases.

On the other hand, ``cannabis products aren't wonder drugs,'' pointed
out Franjo Grotenhermen, a physician and chairman of the
Neunkirchen-based Association for Cannabis as Medicine. He said some
patients benefited greatly from them, but many others little or not at
all. Cannabinoids activate different receptors in the body than do
traditional pain-killing medicines, and can therefore be taken in
combination with them to good effect, Nolte noted.

Though experts agree that cannabis is a psychotropic substance, Nolte
said its addiction potential was not a factor in therapy.

Grotenhermen and his comrades urge that cannabis be made legally
available to seriously ill persons.

They also believes that Germany's public health insurance companies
should cover the costs.

``Doctors are allowed to prescribe Dronabinol, but public health
insurance companies aren't required to pick up the costs,'' Grotenhermen
said. Pain therapy based on cannabinoids is expensive. At about +euro+80
cents for a milligram of Dronabinol, a month of therapy costs more than
+euro+250.

``Illegal hemp is 10 to 20 times cheaper,'' Grotenhermen noted.

Should a patient's public health insurance company refuse to pay, there
is always the nearest drug dealer to turn to.

An alternative is the ``hemp pharmacy'' (www.hanfapotheke.com).

``The hemp pharmacy refers the inquiry to a medical examiner,''
Grotenhermen explained.

The examiner contacts the patient and verifies the need for treatment.
If the need is confirmed, the hemp pharmacy is informed. The pharmacy
then gives the patient's address to a hemp donor that it has contacted
anonymously on the Internet.

The donor sends the marijuana or hashish to the patient for free.

But patients should know the quality, or composition, of their medications.
http://www.bruneitimes.com.bn/details.php?shape_ID=6948

 

 

 

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