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UK: Cannabis on patient trial

Stefan Jarmolowicz

Wrexham Mail

Thursday 28 Aug 2003

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CANNABIS is to be tested as a painkiller on patients recovering from
surgery at the Wrexham Maelor Hospital.

The Maelor will be one of 36 hospitals across the UK - and the only one in
Wales - to pilot the £500,000 scheme, which will see cannabis used as
treatment for patients who have undergone operations.

One of two extracts from the plant will be given to some volunteers, while
others will get normal pain relief drugs or a placebo.

Some patients will receive a capsule containing standardised cannabis
extract or a capsule containing tetrahydrocannabinol, the active ingredient
in cannabis.

The trial, which is being organised by the Medical Research Council (MRC),
is looking to recruit 400 surgical patients from participating hospitals to
take part in the pilot, and the Maelor hopes to receive approval from the
Ethics Committee by September.

A Maelor Hospital spokeswoman said: 'Dr David Counsell, a consultant
anaesthetist at the hospital, is interested in leading the cannabis trials.'

Cannabis use is currently illegal in the UK but campaigners have long
fought to decriminalise the drug.

Medical experts also claim that evidence suggests cannabis can be an
effective pain reliever.

An MRC spokesman said: 'If found to be effective and without adverse side
effects, it could provide another pain relief option to donors and patients.

'There is already some anecdotal evidence that suggests cannabis could be
effective at relieving pain for a variety of debilitating conditions.'

The spokesman added: 'Pain relief side effects will be assessed over a
six-hour period.

'Patients will be asked by a researcher to respond to questions about their
pain and general feelings, such as sickness, every half to one hour while
they are awake.'

Last year, a small trial involving 34 British patients with multiple
sclerosis, spinal cord injuries and other conditions causing severe pain
found that using cannabis-based treat-ments reduced their pain and helped
them to sleep more soundly.

However, campaigner Biz Ivol has accused the NHS of 'delaying tactics',
claiming that clinical trials into cannabis have been conducted in
hospitals for the past 30 years.

Ms Ivol, a wheelchair-bound Multiple Sclerosis (MS) sufferer, said: 'It
just feels like another delaying tactic, saying they have got to do
clinical trials.

'They have done these clinical trials over and over again and it seems that
every successive government uses the excuse that you have got to wait for
clinical trial results.

'They must realise that there are thousands of people with loads of
different illnesses right throughout Britain using cannabis for pain
relief. Why don't they just ask them?

'I don't see why people can't just grow the plant and use it as they want it.'





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Adam Medcalf - adam@ukcia.org
http://www.ukcia.org - UK Cannabis Internet Activists
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