Medical Pot Denial Must End

T

The420Guy

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May 24,00
The Capital Times
By Gary Storck
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As a result of a report released in March of 1999 by the U.S. Institute of Medicine (IOM) that confirmed marijuana's medical utility, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said it was changing its rules in order to make marijuana more readily available for medical research on May 21 of 1999.
This change in policy seemed to indicate that the federal government was finally acknowledging what scientists and physicians have long been saying about marijuana's medicinal properties.
But the fact that now, one year later, no studies have been approved, shows that this was just another cruel stall engineered to create the illusion that the federal government really cares about the health of Americans.
While continuing to suppress research, federal authorities also failed to act on an IOM recommendation to create "an experimental access program to provide smokable marijuana to seriously ill patients who have not benefited from standard medications."
The ongoing federal campaign that denies this therapeutic option to Americans who could benefit must end if governmental credibility is to be preserved. Even children can tell the difference between use and abuse. The fact that the federal government has known of marijuana's medical utility for many years, and rather than sharing it, has instead suppressed it, should be a source of concern to all. Illness can strike anyone at any time, and every therapeutic option should be available to patients and their physicians.

© 2000 The Capital Times
 
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