1 / 25

Medical Marijuana a way to legalize cannabis?

Medical Marijuana a way to legalize cannabis?. ECAD May 13-15 2013 Moscow Kerstin Käll MD, PhD Dependency C linic , University hospital, Linköping, Sweden. Is cannabis medicine or a narcotic drug ?. Is opium medicine or a narcotic drug ? How about amphetamine ?

mahola
Download Presentation

Medical Marijuana a way to legalize cannabis?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Marijuanaa way to legalize cannabis? ECAD May 13-15 2013 Moscow Kerstin Käll MD, PhD DependencyClinic, University hospital, Linköping, Sweden

  2. Is cannabis medicine or a narcoticdrug? • Is opium medicine or a narcoticdrug? • Howaboutamphetamine? • Medicine – pharmaceuticaldrug • Another importantdistinction: • Cannabis (e.g.marijuana - flowers and haschish - resin) • Cannabinoids – extracted from cannabis (e.g. THC, CBD – morethan 60 in total), endocanabinoids (anandamide) and synthetic canabinoids (in Spice)

  3. Cannabis as medicine • Firstdocumented från China 2727 BC • Effects pain, nausea, anorexia, spasticity • There is ongoing research on extractedcannnabinoids • Thereare approved pharmaceuticals, like Marinol and Sativex

  4. Approved pharmaceuticals, 1 • Marinol (THC) • Approved by FDA already in 1985 for treatmentof • Nauseaofchemotherapy • Wastingof AIDS • Not widelyused (duetolimitedeffect and manysideeffects)

  5. Approved pharmaceuticals, 2 • Sativex (THC+CBD) • Mouth spray for spaticityof MS – approved in Sweden in December 2011 • CBD counteractshallucinogeniceffectsof cannabis (almosttotally absent in the abused marijuana dueto plant breeding)

  6. Is marijuana an approved pharmaceutical in the US? • Agenciesthatapprovepharmaceuticals like Läkemedelsverket in Sweden and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the US haveverystrictrequirements for approval • The substanceshould be welldefined and controlled, the same amountshouldcontain the same dose • It must safe and effective • The mode of administration must be safe • The substance must be tested on animals and humans in several steps • The production must be controlled • The profileofsideeffects must be carefullydescribed

  7. Does marijuana meettheserequirements? • THC concentrationvaries a lot (2-30%) and is usuallyunknown. Morethan 60 different cannabinoids. Morethan 400 othersubstances. • Safety is veryquestionable – a numberofserioussideeffects • Psychiatric – psychoses, depression, anxiety • Somatic – lungdeseasesincl. lung cancer • addictive • The effect on e.g. pain and nausea is not impressive • Smoking is not a safe mode of administration. E.g. 4 timesmore tar in the lungscomparedtocigarette smoking

  8. Does marijuana meettheserequirements? – cont. • Tests on animals and humans have not beenperformed • Growing and manufacturing is not at all controlled. E.g. highdosesofpeticidesthatcan harm humans areused • There is no definedprofileofsideeffects, it is sold without a proper descriptionofcontainingsubstances, doseofeachsubstance, howmuch or for how long it should be used for the conditionsinvolved, etc

  9. Has FDA approved marijuana as a pharmaceutical in the US? • The answer is: No. On the contrary. FDA discourages from recommending marijuana smoking for medical purposes • It is still illegal topossesand sell cannabis accordingto federal law in the US • It is illegal to drive while on cannabis • Companiescansack an employeewhorefusestoquit marijuana smoking althoughhe/she is a ”licenced marijuana user”

  10. Then, what has happened in the US? • 18 statesbeginningwith California in1996, havevoted on stateballotinitiativetoallow the useof marijuana for medical purposes withintheirstateborders • The campaigns in support oftheseinitiativeshavebeenwellorganized and wellfunded • E.g. TV commercialswithseverelyillpeopletestifyinghow smoking marijuana has madetheirlives endurable appealingtopeople’scompassion • The criticshave not hadanywherenear as muchfundstospendtooppose the initiatives.

  11. Organisations in support ofmedical marijuana • The Marijuana Policy Project (MPP) • The Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) • The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) • These all havelegalization on their agenda • Twostates – Washington and Colorado in fall 2012 voted in favouroflegalization (”regulate and tax”)

  12. Howdoesmedical marijuana work? • Youobtain a ”recommendation”(not a prescription) from a medicaldoctorthat marijuana may be helpful for yourmedicalcondition • Youcanalso designate a friend or a relative as yourprimarycaregiver • Nowyoubothhavedocumentationthatallowsyoutopossess and grow marijuana för ”medicalpuposes” • Youcannowbothbuy marijuana in so called marijuana dispensaries. • The doctor’srecommendationusually lasts for a yearregardlessof the resultof the medicationand it caneasily be renewed

  13. Howdoes it work? – cont.. • There is virtually no controlofhowmuchyoubuy. Youcanbuyeveryday and in morethanonedispensary • Thereare no requirements for the doctorstofollowup the resultof the medication. • Doctorsadvertizetheir services in local media • Not all doctorsparticipate. At onedispensary >50% of all letters ofrecommendationwereissued by twodoctors

  14. Cont. • AmericanSocietyofAddiction Medicine (ASAM) advicedoctors not torecommend patients touse marijuana for medicalpurpuses • Because marijuana can harm patients • Psychiatricsideeffects (Psychosis, depression etc) • Addictive • Can cause cancer. 4x moreofsome carcinogens than in tobacco • Illegal by federal law • Doctors not protected by theirinsurance • Doctorsmay risk theirlicences

  15. Whoare the ”patients”? • No systematic registration. Onereport from somedispensaries in California revealedthat • 52% were under 30 years old • 72% were under 40 • Common diagnoses: insomnia, anxiety, depression and muscle pain • Cancer, Glauoma and AIDS patients madeupabout 2% of the peoplereceivingmedical marijuana from thesedispensaries

  16. Colorado – oneexample • Medical marijuana ballotinitiativewaspassed in 2000 • In 2010 Colorado had 99.599 registered users = about 2% of the population • 94% were registered on pain diagnosis • In Colorado therewas at thattime 809 marijuana dispensaries, morethanStarbuck’s cafés

  17. Numberof registered patients per doctor in Colorado 9% of the doctors in Coloradehad registered toissue marijuana recommendations

  18. Colorado – whathappenedamongteenagers? • A rapid increase in the numberofmedical marijuana patients occurred in 2009 • Minimum age for medical marijuana is 18 • Whathappenedamongyounger persons? • Marijuana smoking last monthamong 9-12 graders increased from 19 to 30% between 2008 and 2010 (=58% increase) • Schoolexpulsions for druguseincreased from 534 to 753 students (=44% increase)

  19. What is medical marijuana in the US? • A wellorganized, wellfundedstrategyto • Legalize all useof cannabis • With bad science • Ignorance in the general population • By appealingtopeople’scompassionwithseverelyillpeople

  20. References: • David Evans, Esq.Drug Free Schools Coalition New York • Bertha Madras, professor i psykobiologi, Harvard • Eric A. Voth, MD, The Institute of Global Drug Policy • Richard G. Soper, MD. Medical Marijuana: Clinical Considerations and Concerns. AZ Medicine, 2011. • Christian Thurstone. The Impact of MMJ legalization on Colorado’s youth. Presentation vid World Forum Against Drugs, Stockholm 22 maj 2012

More Related