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Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:
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Ireland: Department 'Would Consider' Trials On Cannabis
Eilish O'Regan, Health Correspondent Irish Independent
Tuesday 19 Feb 2002 The Department of Health said yesterday it would consider any proposal from a pharmaceutical company wanting to carry out trials on drugs containing cannabis compounds which would be solely for therapeutic use. The trials would have to be given the go ahead by the Irish Medicines Board which would look after the patient's welfare, said a spokesman. Fine Gael spokesman on health, Gay Mitchell, yesterday said cannabis-based drugs should be made available as medication. Mr Mitchell pointed to the decision of the Department of Health in Britain to carry out trials on cannabinoids in Multiple Sclerosis patients and in patients suffering from post operative pain. Doctors in Britain believe they may be actually prescribing these drugs by 2004, provided the trials prove successful. The UK firm GW Pharmaceuticals said it was hopeful that the first cannabis-based drugs would be available on prescription by that date. GW, which floated on the London stock exchange in June, is the only company to legally develop and produce cannabis-derived drugs. It reports that research is progressing well, with clinical trials showing patients benefiting. The drug is now expected to enter the final Phase III testing. Executive chairman, Dr Geoffrey Guy, said that GW occupies a lead position worldwide and is uniquely placed to become the first company in the world to achieve regulatory approval for prescription cannabis-based medicines.
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