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Cannabis on way to being made legal as painkiller

Press & Journal

Tuesday 19 Feb 2002

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MOVES which could see cannabis-based painkillers made available on
prescription from the National Health Service within two years were
welcomed by patients' groups yesterday.

Health Minister Lord Hunt said the use of cannabis derivatives to
relieve pain in multiple sclerosis sufferers and post-operative patients
was being referred to the National Institute of Clinical Excellence
(Nice).

Trials funded by the Medical Research Council with the backing of the
Department of Health and the Royal Pharmaceutical Society - to assess
the use of cannabinoids in pain relief are already under way.

The results are expected by the end of the year and will be used by Nice
in carrying out its appraisal of the drugs.

Nicola Russell, from the Multiple Sclerosis Trust, the national support
organisation for people with MS, said: 'Our members say they have
enjoyed great benefits from using cannabis but have found themselves
prosecuted for possessing it. Action to tackle this situation is most
welcome."

Multiple sclerosis sufferer Lezley Gibson started smoking cannabis more
than 10 years ago and says that without it she would have no quality of
life.

Mother-of-one Mrs Gibson has been prosecuted for possession of the drug
and is facing similar charges. She said: "It would he great to be able
to get cannabis in some form from the chemist.

'It will mean people who need the medicine, like me, will be able to get
it without being made to feel like a criminal."

Mrs Gibson, of Alston, Cumbria, was 21 when she was diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis, and was told she would be in a wheelchair and
incontinent within five years.

Sixteen years later, she is still able to walk, which she believes is
because of the benefits of cannabis, which 'she started smoking three
years after being told she had the disease.

A decision on whether any of the cannabis derivatives being tested will
be licensed for official medical use is thought likely some time in 2004
or 2005.

If they do receive a licence, the Department of Health said that the NHS
would need timely and clear guidance from Nice on the clinical and cost-
effectiveness of the treatments.

Mrs Gibson's husband, Mark, medical spokesman for the Legalise Cannabis
Alliance, said MS sufferers needed cannabis to be legalised as soon as
possible.

"It might be 2004 before this comes in, which is only two years - but
try telling that to someone who desperately needs the medicine now," he
said.

The debate over the use of cannabis in medicine is controversial and
emotive.

Supporters of the drug claim it has wide-ranging benefits but opponents
say it is a potentially dangerous substance which can actually damage,
health - and can encourage people to use harder drugs such as heroin and
cocaine.

Alleviate

It has been claimed that cannabis can prevent nausea caused by cancer
chemotherapy, alleviate muscle spasms from multiple sclerosis, relieve
chronic pain, and help in the treatment of anorexia, glaucoma, epilepsy
and mood disorders.

Opponents say it damages the ability to concentrate and there are other
side-effects because cannabis has more than 400 active ingredients.

Home Secretary David Blunkett last year announced he wanted the laws
covering cannabis to be eased so that possession would no longer be an
arrestable offence.

The drug would remain illegal under Mr Blunkett's proposals but be
reclassified from a class B to a class C drug, enabling police to
concentrate on harder drugs.

Wiltshire-based GW Pharmaceuticals, which is developing a portfolio of
non-smoked cannabis-based prescription medicines, welcomed the
Government's move.

Scottish National Party shadow deputy health minister Shona Robison said
arguments about the medicinal and recreational use of cannabis should
not be confused.

The North-east MSP said: "Like most people, I support the medicinal use
of cannabis derivatives."

"It will move us away from the silly arguments about cannabis cafes to
the more sensible arguments, about proper medicinal use of cannabis
derivatives which would be very different from the effects that smoking
the drug will have."

Scots Tory health spokeswoman Mary Scanlon said it was better for MS
sufferers to be prescribed cannabis-derived painkillers than be forced
to seek help on the black market.

"I am in favour of extracting the elements from cannabinoids and
manufacturing them legally in order to alleviate the pain and suffering
of multiple sclerosis sufferers said the Highlands and Islands MSP.

Ms Scanlon added that the trials had been going on for three years.

She said that, if Nice determined there were benefits to be had from
prescribing cannabis-based drugs, politicians should support it.

Aberdeen South Labour MP Anne Begg said she had always supported the
availability of cannabinoids, provided their use had been proved
effective for treating groups of patients such as those suffering from
MS. She remained totally op-posed to its use for recreational purposes.

Angus SNP ME Mike Weir said: "We have always been sympathetic to
cannabis being available on prescription and we await the conclusions of
Nice and HTB.'

Gordon Liberal Democrat MP Malcolm Bruce said it was eccentric to ban
cannabis-based medicines on prescription when medicines based on much
harder drugs were available.

Aberdeen North Labour MP Malcolm Savidge said it had always been
anomalous that drugs had always been available which, like morphine,
include heroin derivatives but those of cannabis had been banned.


 

 

 

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