Jacob Redmond
Well-Known Member
Peter Haglin was a paratrooper during the battle for Fallujah in Iraq, and suffered such injuries as a torn ACL, a broken hip, broken feet and multiple head injuries.
But it is his and other veterans' battles with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that has Haglin pushing for Utah to allow the use of medical marijuana.
"We knew what we were getting into and we were good with it," Haglin, of Park City, told the Health and Human Services Interim Committee on Wednesday. "But none of us knew what it was going to be like to live our lives after the dust had settled on our military careers."
The committee got its first glimpse of dueling medical cannabis proposals: an ambitious one pushed by Sen. Mark Madsen, R-Saratoga Springs, and a modest plan put forth by Sen. Evan Vickers, R-Cedar City, and Rep. Brad Daw, R-Orem.
The committee didn't take a position on either proposal, but could do so at its November meeting.
"Let's not take a step we're going to regret later on," said Daw, whose bill would allow 2,000 to 5,000 Utahns access to medications with cannabidiol (CBD), a cannabis extract that does not have mind-altering effects.
Madsen said his bill, which would legalize medications containing both CBD and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is responsible for marijuana users' high, could help nearly 100,000 Utahns.
That bill, still being drafted, would allow people with such conditions as cancer, chronic pain, epilepsy, Crohn's disease and multiple sclerosis to go to medical specialists for prescriptions. Primary physicians could not write such scrips.
One of the chief benefits, Madsen said, would be a reduction in overdose deaths from opioid drugs.
Only veterans would be able to get the medical cannabis for PTSD, said Madsen.
Some 22 vets commit suicide every day, Haglin said. And the existing drugs for PTSD cause weight gain and loss of sexual appetite, he said.
"There are increasing numbers of vets who find cannabis helping in relieving symptoms," he said.
Madsen said the regulatory framework in his bill will involve the Department of Agriculture licensing and regulating growers, processing plants and independent testing labs. The Department of Health would do the same for dispensaries.
Patients would be given a prescription and their doctors would enter the information into a database that law enforcement could access.
Every marijuana plant would be given a bar code, and each resulting product – oils, tinctures and edibles like candy – would retain that bar code so products would be tracked.
"Throughout this process, there is seed-to-sale monitoring," Madsen said.
The bill Daw and Vickers propose would treat cannabis like a medicine, they told the committee. Doctors would make "recommendations" that patients access cannabis at a privately owned dispensary, not write prescriptions. There would be few dispensaries in the state, and no one doctor could make more than 100 recommendations.
The state's Controlled Substance Advisory Committee, in the Department of Commerce, would recommend to the Legislature what medical conditions could be treated with CBD, and would tell doctors what information to gather from patients so researchers could track the drugs' effectiveness, Vickers said.
News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Two Medical Marijuana Bills Pitched To Utah Legislature
Author: Kristen Moulton
Contact: Email The Author
Photo Credit: None Found
Website: SLC Tribune
But it is his and other veterans' battles with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that has Haglin pushing for Utah to allow the use of medical marijuana.
"We knew what we were getting into and we were good with it," Haglin, of Park City, told the Health and Human Services Interim Committee on Wednesday. "But none of us knew what it was going to be like to live our lives after the dust had settled on our military careers."
The committee got its first glimpse of dueling medical cannabis proposals: an ambitious one pushed by Sen. Mark Madsen, R-Saratoga Springs, and a modest plan put forth by Sen. Evan Vickers, R-Cedar City, and Rep. Brad Daw, R-Orem.
The committee didn't take a position on either proposal, but could do so at its November meeting.
"Let's not take a step we're going to regret later on," said Daw, whose bill would allow 2,000 to 5,000 Utahns access to medications with cannabidiol (CBD), a cannabis extract that does not have mind-altering effects.
Madsen said his bill, which would legalize medications containing both CBD and tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is responsible for marijuana users' high, could help nearly 100,000 Utahns.
That bill, still being drafted, would allow people with such conditions as cancer, chronic pain, epilepsy, Crohn's disease and multiple sclerosis to go to medical specialists for prescriptions. Primary physicians could not write such scrips.
One of the chief benefits, Madsen said, would be a reduction in overdose deaths from opioid drugs.
Only veterans would be able to get the medical cannabis for PTSD, said Madsen.
Some 22 vets commit suicide every day, Haglin said. And the existing drugs for PTSD cause weight gain and loss of sexual appetite, he said.
"There are increasing numbers of vets who find cannabis helping in relieving symptoms," he said.
Madsen said the regulatory framework in his bill will involve the Department of Agriculture licensing and regulating growers, processing plants and independent testing labs. The Department of Health would do the same for dispensaries.
Patients would be given a prescription and their doctors would enter the information into a database that law enforcement could access.
Every marijuana plant would be given a bar code, and each resulting product – oils, tinctures and edibles like candy – would retain that bar code so products would be tracked.
"Throughout this process, there is seed-to-sale monitoring," Madsen said.
The bill Daw and Vickers propose would treat cannabis like a medicine, they told the committee. Doctors would make "recommendations" that patients access cannabis at a privately owned dispensary, not write prescriptions. There would be few dispensaries in the state, and no one doctor could make more than 100 recommendations.
The state's Controlled Substance Advisory Committee, in the Department of Commerce, would recommend to the Legislature what medical conditions could be treated with CBD, and would tell doctors what information to gather from patients so researchers could track the drugs' effectiveness, Vickers said.
News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Two Medical Marijuana Bills Pitched To Utah Legislature
Author: Kristen Moulton
Contact: Email The Author
Photo Credit: None Found
Website: SLC Tribune