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UK: Cannabis genuinely helps us, so why can't we get it on the NHS? Emily White Lincolnshire Live Saturday 19 Oct 2019 Home secretary Sajid Javid introduced legislation on November 1 last year which would make it possible for people to legally use cannabis for medicinal reasons. The change meant medicinal cannabis products were moved from schedule 1, meaning they have no medicinal value, to schedule 2, meaning that doctors were allowed to prescribe them. Only a very small number of people have been affected by the change, as General Medical Council guidelines allow doctors to prescribe cannabis only when they feel a licenced medicine will not help their patient. There are only a small number of cannabis-derived medications available for prescription; Epidyolex, which is used to help people with severe epilepsy, and Nabilone, which is largely used to help cancer patients who are suffering from nausea due to chemotherapy. Sativex is another licensed product in the UK that can be used as treatment of MS related spasticity. Read More Doctors are currently unlikely to choose to prescribe cannabis for any other reason, mainly because very few clinical trials have proven cannabis can help a wider range of conditions and many medical complaints can be treated using licenced alternative drugs. But campaigners have said that cannabis is effective at treating a host of other physical and psychological complaints and would like to see doctors prescribe it for those conditions too. Lincolnshire Live spoke to people who use cannabis for medicinal purposes to find out why they use marijuana medicinally and what they think of the legalisation process, one year on. "I was prescribed morphine and ended up becoming an addict." A 36 year-old man from Lincoln began using marijuana medicinally after an accident at work left him in agonising pain. He said: "I had my entire right arm crushed in an accident at work. I had to have my arm reconstructed and have been left with several metal rods that essentially hold my arm together. "The pain medication I was prescribed to manage my pain was horrendous. I was prescribed morphine and ended up becoming an addict. "I couldn't stop taking it and even with the morphine, the pain I was in day to day was unimaginable. "A friend, who saw the state I was in from my morphine addiction, suggested trying marijuana to take away the pain which I did, and straight away it was like my entire body purged of any of the pain I felt. "The only way I can describe the withdrawal from morphine is if you've ever seen the film Trainspotting, it's exactly like that. "I think one of the worst side effects was that I was constipated for about a month. I was an absolute wreck but eventually the withdrawal stopped. "Since then I've found that marijuana has completely revolutionised my life and I have been pain free ever since." 'We want people to have the right to grow their own' Stacey, 28, is a member of the group cannabis campaign group 'UKCSC', and has been a user of cannabis for a number of years. She started using cannabis to manage her mental health when the antidepressants she was taking failed to work. She said: "What we're fighting for and have always fought for is the right for people to grow their own. "We all have cannabinoid receptors in our bodies that are ready to receive the cannaboids found in the cannabis plant. "For many of my friends, and those who I know require the use of cannabis medicinally, it is still simply too hard to obtain on the NHS. "Medical professionals are incredibly reluctant to prescribe and for anybody that wants to get it, you have to go through so many loop holes, and even then it is used as an absolute last resort in the most extreme of cases. "People are being denied their right to medicine that has the potential to alleviate their symptoms and instead are forced to live in pain, or get their cannabis from untrustworthy sources on the streets. "Personally, I've spoken about my story before and my battle with antidepressants that turned me into a zombie. I wasn't able to take care of my kids whilst on them, I could barely function. Using marijuana saved me from that. "Attitudes amongst medical professionals still need to change. The stigma surrounding medicinal marijuana use needs to end." Although the research is often muddled when it comes to whether marijuana is an effective treatment for anxiety disorders due to small sample sizes and limitations in the research, there is no shortage of anecdotal evidence from those who use marijuana to alleviate their symptoms. Eauan Green, 25, is from Lincoln and uses marijuana medicinally to ease his symptoms of anxiety and depression. He has spoken about his own personal use of marijuana for medicinal purposes and describes how marijuana has improved the health of both his mum and his sister. He said: "For me, it helps to keep me grounded. I suffer from anxiety and depression and from a young age alcohol had a very damaging effect for me. I felt very demotivated and it was very easy for me to slip into a negative mind frame. "Using marijuana brings me out of myself. It helps me feel more productive and more creative. I have found a great number of friends through smoking and made bonds with people that I ordinarily wouldn't have if I didn't. "My sister has Lupus which is an autoimmune disease and she regularly smokes it to ease the pain she's in. Similarly for my mum, who has fibromyalgia, it helps her to move around more freely and takes away some of her pain." 'Smoking cannabis helps me get up, face the day and look after my kids' There is no denying the medicinal value of CBD and THC - two cannabinoids found in marijuana and hemp. Since the landmark decision in 2018, a giddy array of CBD-themed products have flooded the market: from pills, chewing gum, cooking and massage oils and even lube. Research by the Centre for Medicinal Cannabis estimates that the CBD market in the UK is potentially worth almost £1bn a year. It seems CBD is certainly good for business, but critics claim that the vast majority of CBD products on the market have little to no medicinal use due to them only containing trace amounts of CBD. In the UK, CBD can only be sold and advertised as a generic food supplement. "Businesses are cashing in on CBD and exploiting people when their products do very little," said the anonymous 36 year-old. "The companies producing these products use the lowest grade CBD and they shouldn't be trusted. The CBD needs to be used in conjunction with the THC in order to work." Should cannabis be legalised? Here's what the people of Lincolnshire had to say The individuals we spoke to said there needs to be radical changes in the use of marijuana, both medicinally and recreationally. Stacey said: "We've found that our biggest problem is the local police. "We've found that generally the public tend to be more accepting, it's the police that need to catch up. We have spoken with the DCC and we do know there is a meeting planned for January which we are hopeful for big changes. "Places like Club Exhale in Middlesborough, which is a safe place for cannabis users to come and socialise, has been proved to work. It was backed by the local police force and they have seen a huge drop in crime rates from that." Club Exhale has become England's first 'legal' cannabis club and sits on the outskirts of an industrial estate in Middlesborough. The club was visited by and received the support of the Police and Crime Commissioner for North Wales, Arfon Jones. "The benefits of marijuana are endless and not just simply for smoking, said Stacey. "We'd like to see the use of medicinal marijuana become more accessible to those who really need it, without them being demonised or criminalised." https://www.lincolnshirelive.co.uk/news/local-news/cannabis-prescriptions-on-nhs-marijuana-3404574?fbclid=IwAR1w-rqLfM2lOuxOLUtr40SpoO5LsC1KCc7EfnmLuLz58tXr2hxS7XRWf2w
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