Registered user login:

Legalise medicinal cannabis!

John Pring

Published 03 September 2007

The editor of Disability Now argues the case for cannabis accepting there are some risks associated with the drug but citing the benefits to a variety of conditions

It is not unusual for the voices of disabled people to be drowned out when an issue affecting them erupts in the national media.

But in the wake of new research linking cannabis use with a higher risk of developing schizophrenia, the mainstream media's failure to seek the views of disabled people has been even more marked than usual.

Most importantly, those fuelling the debate have failed to note that cannabis possesses pain relief properties.

Following the latest delays to regulatory approval for the cannabis-based drug Sativex, the new eruption of controversy will surely only make it more difficult for disabled people to source the safe and affordable cannabis that could ease their pain.

Hundreds of disabled people have contacted Disability Now since we launched our campaign in 1997 to legalise medicinal cannabis, to tell us how much they rely on the drug.

They don’t want to have to deal with drug dealers, face harassment from the criminal justice system, and risk criminal records and possible prison sentences.

They want a safe, secure way of gaining access to a drug that has a hugely positive impact on their quality of life.

These are the kind of things our readers told us when we asked them whether taking cannabis helps relieve their symptoms:

"None of my prescribed drugs have been as effective as cannabis in relieving my most severe bouts of pain."

"The pain relief I get greatly improves my mobility."

"Yes, it makes a big difference to the amount of pain I have."

"It is the only time I can get relief from pain and am able to get a decent night’s sleep. It also helps me sleep properly and reduces severe depression."

"It makes a great difference to my mental state, the amount of sleep I get and my muscle spasms."

"It relieves spasticity, it also helps with bladder control. It’s also a good analgesic."

"It doesn’t take all of the pain away but it relieves it enough for me to function."

This is just a small sample of those who have responded to our surveys of medicinal cannabis users over those ten years.

These aren’t voices you will hear at the moment in the national media, partly no doubt because of the reactionary atmosphere stirred up by those who seek to increase the sentences for those who use cannabis.
There are other voices you won’t hear.

In April’s DN, Labour MP Paul Flynn described the prosecution and conviction of a disabled woman for growing and possessing cannabis she used medicinally as "barbaric". We agree.

His fellow Labour MP, Dr Brian Iddon, whose wife has arthritis, said in the same issue: "It is unbelievable, in the 21st century, that somebody suffering from pain that gets relief from using cannabis and nothing else should be treated harshly by the judicial system." Again, we agree.

The debate around the possible risks of cannabis has been one-sided and has ignored the proven benefits of the drug for people with conditions such as arthritis, cancer and multiple sclerosis.

Disabled people should be free to make up their own minds about the competing benefits and risks of using the drug.

The scientists involved in the new research seem to accept that there is no certainty that cannabis is causing the increased risk of psychosis.

And we should remember that there appears to have been no increase in schizophrenia over the last 40 years, despite the huge increase in cannabis use over that period.

But yes, it is likely that there are some risks of using cannabis, and it seems sensible to warn younger people particularly of the possible dangers.

But don’t all drugs have side-effects? We believe that, for many disabled people who do or could use cannabis medicinally, the potential benefits of using the drug heavily outweigh the risks.

The government should legislate to ensure that disabled people can make up their own minds, free from persecution. It should legalise medicinal cannabis now. Nothing in the latest research alters that conclusion.

John Pring, acting editor, Disability Now newspaper

Post this article to

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • newsvine
  • NowPublic
  • Reddit

6 comments from readers

ksvaughan2
04 September 2007 at 13:25

There is good evidence that people in pain process drugs differently from those who are not in pain. Often they feel relief instead of a "high". Cannabis has a variety of valid medicinal uses, which should be distinguished from more dangerous recreational uses. And the administration via smoking allows pinpoint dosage control which extracted constituents in oral form lack. In any event, pharmaceutical extractions of the herb are quite different from the whole medicinal plant itself.

littlesailorjo
06 September 2007 at 01:28

All 'drugs' by definition have effects upon the body and/or mind. Many of these effects are unintentional and possibly even harmful. But it should be at the discretion and consideration of a patient and their clinician whether the risks and unintentional effects of a drug out-weigh it's benefits or not. Prohibition of a drug for clinical use on the grounds of preventing recreational use says bad things about a society. We may not want the vulnerable coerced into using drugs that damage their health, but denying relief to the afflicted is cruel. This prohibition is also ineffective at preventing recreational use anyway.

gini007
26 November 2007 at 21:36

I totally agree with medicinal cannabis ...but those who smoke it for pleasure i suggest a narconon drug rehab

anonymous
13 April 2008 at 11:25

After several years in pain and prescribed pain killers for a misdiagnosis of arthritis and these pain killers making my pain worse I myself eventually turned to cannibis.. One joint as they call it (must note i was most reluctant to light the rolled product) and I no pain over the next six months.... It changed my life completely.... I had previously spent most of the previous 2 years deprived of sleep through the constant pain I was in.. This was making life a misery for my family as due to lack of sleep I was easily angered or in tears at the slightest thing... During divorce the pains returned and did go try prescribed first before turning back to cannibis... In all this time i'd been able to hold down a job because of the days off sick.. Eventually I was diagnosed correctly with gall bladder and helicobactor pylori (present with ulcers(no wonder the amount of pain killers were making symptoms worse)... I can honestly say the most relief I got was thru smoking cannibis. Would I use it again ? If need be I would but right now I have no use for it. I'm not an addict and it never wanted me to go out fighting(in fact it was a total opposite feeling) It is a relaxant and therefore helps to relax severe spasms which can cause intense pain..... Only other drug that helped was Morphine given in the hospital but the only to get Morphine was to attend A & E regularly and to be made to feel like a burden to the NHS.....

anonymous
13 April 2008 at 11:29

just to add to the post 13th april 2008 (11.25am)........ since being cured and thanks to the relief i got from cannibis i went on to take 3 diploma's and set up my own business so i don't think it destroyed my brain either ............

anonymous
13 April 2008 at 11:44

ARE NOT SOME OF THE PRESCRIBED DRUGS OPEN TO ABUSE AND ABLE TO HAVE SOME SEVERE SIDE EFFECTS TOO.

IF THEY WANT TO BAN CANNIBIS BECAUSE OF THE WORRY ABOUT SIDE EFFECTS THEN I THINK THEY SHOULD ALSO BAN EVERYDAY PAIN KILLERS WE GET FROM THE CHEMIST..... NOTHING IS WITHOUT RISK BUT IT CAN BE MODIFIED. IF CANNIBIS IS PRESCRISED IN IT'S NATURAL FORM WITH DIRECTIONS (I.E LABELLED WITH HOW OFTEN THE PATIENT SHOULD TAKE THE DRUG)........ YES PEOPLE WILL MISUSE IT JUST AS THEY DO AEROSOLS, GLUE, ANTI-DEPRESSANTS AND ALCOHOL.... WHY SHOULD THE ONES THAT REALLY NEED IT SUFFER THE PAIN JUST BECAUSE OF THE FEW THAT ARE WILLING TO ABUSE IT....... WE ARE ALLOWED ALCOHOL WHICH CAN INDUCE VIOLENT BEHAVIOUR AND WRONG DOING AND QUITE RIGHT THOSE PEOPLE ARE ARRESTED AND THE SAME RULES COULD APPLY TO THE USE OF CANNIBIS.........

Post your comment

Please note: you will need to login or register before your comment is displayed on the website

We want to encourage people to comment on our content and to exchange views with other readers and hope this will be done on a courteous basis. However, if you encounter posts which are offensive please let us know by emailing comments@newstatesman.co.uk and we will take swift action where necessary.

Read More

Vote!

Would you feed GM foods to your children?