By Cydney Hargis
Inter Press Service/News Report
nationofchange.org
The controversial topic of medical cannabis has been put under a
microscope after the internationally known neurosurgeon Dr. Sanjay Gupta
came out in support of its use this week.
“Gupta literally made a 12 or 13 year turn on this,” the executive
director of the advocacy group NORML, Allen St. Pierre, told IPS. “But
as a really genuine doctor who is a scientific minded person, he really
did want to see the science and let it led him to a different
standing.”In a lengthy opinion piece on
CNN, Gupta outlines the benefits of medical cannabis, claims that U.S.
citizens have been misled by the government for years, and apologises
for his role in that. This reversal of opinions occurred during the
yearlong production of his documentary “Weed”, which premiers this
Sunday on CNN.
The benefits
Illinois is the most recent state to legalise medicinal marijuana,
making a total of 20 U.S. states and the District of Columbia that allow
its medical use. Approval conditions, regulations and quantity limits
can vary from state to state.
The federal law enforcement agency, the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), has classified marijuana as a Schedule I drug,
meaning it has no medical benefit and has a high potential for abuse,
with nine to 10 percent of its adult users becoming addicted.
Cocaine, according to the DEA, is less dangerous than marijuana and
is a Schedule II drug even though 20 percent of its users become
addicted.
“They didn’t have the science to support that claim [of marijuana
as a Schedule I drug], and I now know that when it comes to marijuana
neither of those things are true,” wrote Gupta in his CNN piece. “It
doesn’t have a high potential for abuse, and there are very legitimate
medical applications.”
Gupta uses Charlotte Figi, a patient in Colorado, as an example of
the benefits. She began having seizures soon after birth, and by age
three she was having up to 300 a week despite being on seven different
prescription medicines. Medicinal cannabis calmed her brain and limited
her seizures to two to three times per month.
According to NORML, cannabis is specifically used to alleviate pain
from nerve damage, nausea, spasticity, glaucoma and movement disorders.
It is also a powerful appetite stimulant, which is beneficial for
patients suffering from dementia, HIV and AIDS.
“The government and some of our opponents will say with a straight
face that it [medical marijuana] has no utility,” St. Pierre told IPS.
“It is cheaper than most pharmaceuticals and can be used for over a
dozen aliments. The utility combined with the price makes it hard for
them to make a convincing argument.”
A new survey done
at the nonprofit organisation The Partnership at Drugfree.org found
that 70 percent of respondents support the medical use of marijuana and
50 percent support decriminalisation. Forty percent of respondents
supported the legalisation of marijuana altogether.
“Most frightening to me is that someone dies in the United States
every 19 minutes from prescription drug overdose, mostly accidental,”
Gupta wrote. “It’s a horrifying statistic. As much as I searched, I
could not find a documented case of death from a marijuana overdose.”
The consequences
According to a study done
in the United Kingdom, people who smoke marijuana regularly tend to
produce less dopamine, a feel good chemical in the brain that plays a
large role in reward-driven behaviour and motivation. Regular marijuana
use can also lead to inflammation in the brain, according to the study,
which can affect coordination and learning.
Gupta also admitted in his CNN piece that regular marijuana use in
younger and developing brains can lead to a permanent decrease in IQ.
There is also clear evidence that some users can experience withdrawal
symptoms including insomnia, anxiety and nausea.
“Much in the same way that I wouldn’t let my own children drink
alcohol, I wouldn’t permit marijuana until they are adults,” wrote
Gupta. “If they are adamant about trying marijuana, I will urge them to
wait until they’re in their mid-20s when their brains are fully
developed.”
Project SAM, the nonprofit organisation advocating for the
responsible use of medicinal cannabis, is urging Gupta to clarify what
he is referring to when he says marijuana. According to the
organisation, CBD is a non-intoxicating element found in medically used
cannabis whereas street bought marijuana contains THC, which is
specifically used to get a high.
“Dr. Gupta is a person Americans looks up to with high esteem. And
for good reason – he is thoughtful, thorough and dispassionate about the
science. That is why we are troubled by how people might interpret his
comments,” Project SAM said in a press release.
Despite the highly documented consequences and concerns, marijuana is
the third most popular recreational drug in the United States, behind
alcohol and tobacco. About 100 million citizens use it, and about 14
million do so regularly.
Some 50,000 people each year die from alcohol poisoning and 400,000
people die from tobacco each year, but marijuana is a non-toxic drug
that cannot cause death by overdose.
“The fact that this guy [Gupta] enjoys a really wonderful national
reputation, and now he is saying ‘my bad’ in a culture where alpha males
don’t usually admit that they are wrong, will…affirm that we are in an
era of change,” St. Pierre told IPS.
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