Patients' Voices Must Be Heard In Cannabis Legalization Debate

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
A quick survey of recent headlines around the legalization discussion, even the federal task force's press conference, reveals a conspicuous absence: medical cannabis and the patients who rely on it.

The current debate and coverage focuses on legalization and regulation combining the interests of everyone from recreational users to growers to government. Without the interests of patients represented in this debate, we run the risk of establishing a future framework that is set up to fail and will require further modification.

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The debate about cannabis legalization is complex and encompasses many different aspects from distribution models, to the rights of medical patients, from Canadian's right to freedom of choice, to large-scale commercialization. When the legalization conversation does include medical issues, much of the focus is on medical cannabis users and dispensaries and, more to the point, the quality of medicine available at dispensaries. Fundamental to this discussion are the interests of the 450,000 Canadians who use medical cannabis and how best to monitor medical cannabis to safely and effectively treat them.

To understand medical cannabis, it helps to understand the path to choosing it. Medical cannabis can be a last line of treatment for those who have unsuccessfully tried pharmaceuticals. When pharmaceuticals are successful, the side-effects of treatments -- for more than a dozen diseases classified by Health Canada eligible for medical cannabis -- can be especially intense and unbearable causing patients to either seek other options, or incorporate cannabis into their regimen to ease these symptoms.

For example, a person living with multiple sclerosis (MS) may change treatments three or more times because the side-effects are excruciating, including reoccurring hot flashes, tissue degradation, digestive problems or hair loss. On the other hand, patients may eschew pharmaceutical treatments altogether, opting for a more "natural" option -- as is their choice.

The medical industry works hard to ensure treatments are safe and effective, but sometimes the results are not optimal and another option is prescribed. Throughout the process, physicians look after patients' best interests.

We need to define a model for medical cannabis that puts patients first as well, and allows their physicians to provide the same level of care with cannabis as they do with other medications.

Prohibition has largely denied the medical community the chance to study the effects this plant has on the human body so we have quite a bit of catch up to do. Canada has a system in place called Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations (MMPR) that has created a starting point to treat patients.

The logical next step is enhancing patient care and improving the collaboration between clinics, doctors, licensed producers and Health Canada. Access is a great start, but it's not enough. Patients need more trained nurses and health professionals with the ability to guide patients in the right direction, to sup-port them on their journey to wellness with medical cannabis.

Lastly, understanding where your medication comes from and what exactly is in it is critical. While it's understandable that the current legal landscape discourages dispensaries from disclosing their sources, this is one thing that must change in order for us to progress toward medical standardization. If we are to treat medical cannabis as a true medicine, then we must adhere to the same rules and regulations that all medicine is subject to.

Regulating the source of the drug allows physicians and patients alike to study and better understand how their medicine works in concert with other pharmaceuticals, or with various conditions and lifestyles. Medical cannabis has different effects on different people and treatments must involve not only the medicine, but education around the medication, personalized treatment plans and regular follow-up care.

Patients are critical to the success of future legalization and regulation of marijuana in Canada, and specifically medical cannabis. The needs of 450,000 Canadians who depend on medical cannabis are the fundamental criteria that will guide and help shape a positive trajectory for the Federal Task led by Anne McLellan.

These patients' needs and experiences regarding medical cannabis must be represented and fully considered by the task force and government as they make decisions on regulations for a legal cannabis marketplace for both marijuana and medical cannabis.
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
This is a good article. I think if something works for you and doesn't have negative effects, I don't see why you should keep it from the people. Only a few people in a government make decisions on millions of people.
But no mention of home production. There is the answer to knowing what you are getting, not what a label at a dispensary says.. Any system that does not include personal gardens is dead before it's announced.
 

jafro daweedhound

Well-Known Member
Only a few people in a government make decisions on millions of people.
Only a few people in a government make millions of dollars of sick people- LP is the term.

August 25th there will be rioting in the streets over their "new regs for MMP".

Here are my questions........ If HC was truly trying to help sick people, then why does it take 6 months to do anything. And why has it been since sept of 2014 that the sick have been unable to get a license to produce this medicine, and why does HC say cannabis is not a medicine. August 25th we should be burning up every phone line calling for Fill of Pot to be replaced !!!!!
 
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Tektek

Well-Known Member
Harper gutted federal civil service for years. Bye bye scientists, the truth is getting in the way. Lawyers/accountants from Revenue Can went to the private sector, help them dodge taxes.
HC too I guess. Who's left? Harper's buddies I guess. And probably short staffed now.
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
Regulating the source of the drug allows physicians and patients alike to study and better understand how their medicine works in concert with other pharmaceuticals, or with various conditions and lifestyles. Medical cannabis has different effects on different people and treatments must involve not only the medicine, but education around the medication, personalized treatment plans and regular follow-up care.

Hmmmm....regulating is not going to help anyone understand....studying it will....medical cannabis has different effects on different people....sort of like pharmas only different because it won't kill you if you take it wrong or too much, and we really need to be concerned about the side effects of this medicine...since when does lifestyle factor into medication use....no one asked me how active or sedentary I was when I took a shitload of morphine....why should it matter if I'm a couch potatoe or an athlete who uses mj? I mean really....sick people being asked about their lifestyle? Well let's see...after a shitty night of sleep I get up and use cannabis with my coffee...then I rinse and repeat in various other scenarios throughout the day....the more I think about it, what would a seat at the table regarding legalization accomplish for patients?
 

Tektek

Well-Known Member
Regulating the source of the drug allows physicians and patients alike to study and better understand how their medicine works in concert with other pharmaceuticals, or with various conditions and lifestyles. Medical cannabis has different effects on different people and treatments must involve not only the medicine, but education around the medication, personalized treatment plans and regular follow-up care.
LP garbage bud is not medicine. 5 LP's sent me bunk. Where are the glandular trichome heads?? Where's Waldo?
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jafro daweedhound

Well-Known Member
5 LP's sent me bunk
Please tell us you never tried # 6
Trichomes are the last thing to come together after every thing else was done just how the plant wants. They are the rewards for job well done - a thank you from the plant.
So as to why the swchag factory doesn't have any Trichomes - proof is in the product. Did you call HC ?????
 

Tektek

Well-Known Member
One order from new LP to keep new Dr. happy. Whistler Med sent OG, about 15% of trichomes have glandular heads, garbage. Eventually I will post macro pics of the bunk.
20% THC, should be covered in heads. Even then, what are they filled with, sometimes not much that's any good.
For any normal healthy variety, all the stalked trichs should have heads. Heads grow with trichs, not a bonus at end.
HC?? Contacted re Tilray bunk. Too busy with side effect complaints to handle quality complaints. DUUHHH!!!
Complaining about LP bunk is about as effective as complaining about Toronto traffic.
Too dodgy now, I need a permit to grow.
 

Gingerbee

Well-Known Member
any which way you cut it the supreme court said i have the right to grow what i need. Cause the last time i checked i did'nt suddenly stop being a palliative patient, so what ever they do don't mean shit to me or my garden.
I don't get why i have to get a new script every year up till my death. Which make no sense at all.
 
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