Ending the Government's Medical Marijuana
Misinformation Campaign
Government Must Correct Medical Marijuana Misinformation
NEWS ADVISORY from AMERICANS FOR SAFE ACCESS – CONTACT:
William Dolphin (510) 919-1498
Petition Says Health and Human Services is Target of Patient-Group Action
Under Data Quality Act
Press Conference Noon Monday with Doctors and Patients at the National Press
Club
(Washington, D.C.) Wednesday, September 29 – When the government says there
is no medical use for Marijuana, it’s just plain wrong, according to a petition
being filed Monday under the Data Quality Act, a little-known law that requires
federal agencies to rely on sound science.
If the patient-advocacy group filing the claim prevails, the Department of
Health and Human Services will have to change its tune on medical Marijuana and
publicly admit that the drug is now routinely used for medical treatment.
Americans for Safe Access, the national medical-Marijuana advocacy group
responsible for the petition, will hold a noon press conference at the National
Press Club. Reporters will enjoy a light lunch and hear from leading
physicians, research scientists, medical Marijuana patients, and
representatives from some of the dozens of professional health organizations
that have endorsed changing federal rules to allow medical use of Marijuana,
including the American Public Health Association and the American Nurses
Association.
At issue is the government’s insistence that “Marijuana has no currently
accepted medical use in treatment in the United States,” a conclusion Health
and Human Services reached in 2001 after a Food and Drug Administration review.
According to the petition, established research, federal reports and patient
experience all show Marijuana works for pain, nausea, loss of appetite,
anxiety, and spasticity, the severe muscle spasms associated with Multiple
Sclerosis, spinal injury and other conditions.
Admitting Marijuana has medical use would clear the way to allowing doctors to
prescribe Marijuana to their patients. Currently, nine states have laws
permitting patients to legally use it with a doctor’s recommendation, but those
laws are at odds with the federal prohibition that ranks Marijuana as more
dangerous than cocaine or amphetamines.
A U.S. Court of Appeals ruling in favor of Dr. Marcus Conant, who will appear
at the press conference, prevents the government from sanctioning doctors who
make those recommendations. The Supreme Court will soon review another
appellate decision that found certain California medical Marijuana patients and
their caregivers to be exempt from the federal prohibition.
WHAT: Press conference on correcting government statements on medical
Marijuana. Lunch provided.
WHO: Prominent physicians, medical Marijuana patients, and advocates,
including:
* Marcus Conant, MD, leading HIV/AIDS clinician and researcher whose suit
against the government established the right of physicians to recommend
Marijuana to their patients;
*Denis Petro, MD, chief of neurology, Malcolm Grow Medical Center of Andrews
Air Force Base, a leading researcher in treating Multiple Sclerosis with
Marijuana and its cannabinoid components;
*Robert Melamede, PhD, chair of the biology department, University of Colorado
at Colorado Springs, where he researches and teaches on the role of
cannabinoids in health and disease.
WHEN: Noon, Monday, October 4, 2004.
WHERE: National Press Club, Edwin R. Murrow Room, 13th Floor, 14th and F
Sts. NW, Washington, D.C.