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UK: MP calls for legal cannabis treatment

Tom Bodden Welsh Affairs Correspondent

icNorthWales.co.uk

Thursday 18 Sep 2003

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A NORTH Wales Tory AM called yesterday for the legal use of cannabis as
pain relief.

Mark Isherwood wants the drug to be available on prescription for sufferers
of multiple sclerosis, cancer or HIV Aids.

He urged Health Minister Jane Hutt to back demands for cannabis and its
derivatives to be legalised in this way.

Conservative Party policy is generally opposed to the use of cannabis in
this way until evidence proves that the benefits outweigh potential side
effects.

But Mr Isherwood said: "It is criminal to criminalise these people in pain,
as we do now, when they obtain or import their cannabis illegally.

"We must listen to the experts - the patients themselves."

The AM said that a visit to the MS Centre in Saltney, on Deeside and
discussions with MS sufferers had persuaded him that cannabis could have
medicinal benefits.

"I have become convinced that cannabis can be used as a beneficial therapy
to combat pain and spasms and that it should be made available under
prescription like any other medical drug," he said.

"We must now bite the bullet and seek early de-classification that
legalises prescribed cannabis medication in Wales and the UK," he said.

Harri Owen-Jones, director of the Multiple Sclerosis Therapy Support Centre
in Saltney said yesterday: "We totally support the relief of pain for
people with incurable diseases.

"Cannabis is known to provide that relief in many cases. We would support
the medicinal use and control of this drug."

A spokeswoman for the Assembly government declined to comment on the issue
yesterday. "Cannabis is an illegal drug and that is not a devolved matter,"
she said.

A spokesman at Conservative Central Office said: "We are opposed to it,
because of side effects, such as the higher carcinogenic nature of cannabis
compared to tobacco. But we would be open to persuasion if the evidence
proved its benefits."


 

 

 

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