Historic Federal Summit On Medicine Marijuana Is Slanted By Drug War Agenda

Robert Celt

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A seemingly historic medical marijuana summit by several US government health agencies will largely exclude evidence coming from the states that have legalized medical cannabis – another example of entrenched Washington, DC bureaucrats placing politics over science in the marijuana debate.

The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) and four other NIH institutes and centers is holding the "Marijuana and Cannabinoids: A Neuroscience Research Summit" today and tomorrow in Bethesda, Maryland.

"The overarching goal is to present current basic research and evidence-based information to identify research gaps to ultimately inform science, practice, and policy," an NCCIH release states.

But the presence of at least one co-sponsor, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, ensures that the summit will be less about healing and more about Reefer Madness. NIDA's official mission is to fund studies to find harms in cannabis – not any benefit. The summit will not include leading doctors who treat patients with medical marijuana, or patients themselves.

Instead, NIDA's director, Dr. Nora Volkow is opening and closing the summit, which will showcase NIDA's most recent research efforts to show marijuana harms the brain, brain development, and function. The White House Drug Czar will weigh in after lunch, followed by talks on pot and psychosis, pot addiction, and combining pot with alcohol.

Only at the end of the day will speakers address the ability of cannabis to treat epilepsy and multiple sclerosis. A marijuana-derived drug reduced seizures by 40 percent in kids with untreatable epilepsy, clinical trials revealed last week.

Tomorrow, NIDA will relay its latest on pot and driving in the morning. Talks on cannabis' potential for use on pain and anxiety precede discussions about potential negative health effects of legalization.

States with medical marijuana laws have 25 percent less opioid overdoses than states without cannabis access, a study published in JAMA showed.

In February, US Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachussetts, asked the CDC to consider legalizing pot to stem the opioid overdose epidemic.

The summit is a missed opportunity, said Dr. Sunil Aggarwal, affiliated faculty of the MultiCare Institute of Research and Innovation. Aggarwal just spent a year as a clinical fellow at the NIH intramural campus, and wrote us that "there is a strong bureaucratic taboo in discussing any of the reemerging science or art of cannabis medicine."

"This conference does break down some of that taboo, but performs a great disservice to the American people by excluding in the core agenda medical and scientific speakers who can describe health lessons learned from the two dozen medical cannabis state level programs in the United States," he wrote.

Millions of patients have been treated by botanical cannabis, Aggarwal notes. One in twenty California adults have reported using medical cannabis for a serious condition and 92 percent of them believe pot worked, researchers report.

"This belies the strong phamaceuticalized cannabis slant of this conference, despite its co-sponsorship by the National Center on Complementary and Integrative Health, which ought to be studying cannabis and cannabinoid integrative health and medicine, not ignoring it," Aggarwal wrote.

The doctor who wrote the textbook on cannabis in Integrative Oncology, Donald Abrams of San Francisco, is also not part of the summit. Neither is leading researcher on using marijuana to treat PTSD – Dr. Sue Sisley.

According to the National Cancer Institute, cannabis users have a 45 percent decrease in the likelihood of bladder cancer compared to non-users.

The journal Epidemiology reported cannabis users had 30 percent less likelihood of diabetes compared to non-users in studies.

The American Epilepsy Society reported a 47 percent drop in pediatric epileptic seizures during clinical trials of cannabis extract Epidiolex, and 9 percent of kids in the study became seizure-free.

Cannabis is ranked number one on the US government list of the most dangerous drugs. Researchers report facing more hurdles to studying botanical cannabis than any other drug.

Prescription opioids are far less controlled. The number of overdose deaths from cannabis in recorded history is zero, while the number of overdose deaths from opioids in 2014 in the United States totaled 28,647. Doctors wrote 259 million opioid pain medication prescriptions in 2012. About 100 Americans die every day from opioid overdoses.

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News Moderator: Robert Celt 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Historic Federal Summit On Medicine Marijuana Is Slanted By Drug War Agenda
Author: David Downs
Contact: East Bay Express
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Website: East Bay Express
 
According to the National Cancer Institute, cannabis users have a 45 percent decrease in the likelihood of bladder cancer compared to non-users.

The journal Epidemiology reported cannabis users had 30 percent less likelihood of diabetes compared to non-users in studies.

These are the results of people smoking recreationally and yet the NIDA opposes serious investigative study, things that make you go 'Hmmmmm'.
I recently heard a report that western states have been experiencing large increases in real estate value. I need to dig into this and see if the States experiencing the growth are also the non-prohibition States. It would make sense that values go up as demand increases, a demand that may be growing because of an influx of people fleeing prohibition for recreation or health uses of cannabis. As noted by the two health issues of cancer and diabetes (two very expensive public health issues) how long do you think it will take for the public and private health expenditures to decrease in the non-prohibition States due to decreases in cost of treating and possibly curing epilepsy, cancer, diabetes, crohn's disease, neurodegenerative diseases and so many others. I broke my back several years ago, a very nasty compression fracture of three lumbar vertebrae, that sent bone fragments like shrapnel into my spine. The surgeons said that I would probably be confined to a wheel chair and would definitely be using diapers due the level of injury of the nerves in the lumbar area. Not having insurance I was discharged in two weeks with a prescription for a weeks worth of Tylox. I never filled that prescription but instead went straight home and twisted up a nice big joint and continued to smoke, heavily. I was up walking and diaper free within three months and the surgeons were so pleased with themselves but where I do give them credit I also have learned over the last few years that it was more than likely the cannabis that saved me from hell. We know now that our beloved plant helps with the healing of bone and nerve injuries.
Again, the reductions of Bladder Cancer and diabetes and my own health apparently benefited from simply smoking cannabis, which many of the so called medical legal States still outlaw, not using concentrated oils etc. as we can/could have available today.
How long will we allow the NIDA, DEA, Cops and the prison industry hold us captive to their ignorance, greed and puritanical ideologies?
 
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