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American Psychiatric Association Assembly Unanimously Backs Medical Marijuana

Posted Nov 7, 2007 by  omnithought in Science | 12 comments | 1085 views
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The American Psychiatric Association Assembly, a top medical organization in the United States, has issued a unanimous statement in support of the decriminalization and medical use of marijuana.
Far from being a fringe group, the American Psychiatric Association Assembly is an extremely well respected medical organization in the United States. They have issued a very strong and direct statement which their members support unanimously that urges legal protection for patients who have a doctor's prescription for marijuana.

The American Psychiatric Association is the main organization for professional psychiatrists in America. It has 40,000 members and 16 allied organizations, including the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Association for Social Psychiatry, American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry, and the American Association of Emergency Psychiatrists.

As Salem-News.com reports, Bruce Mirken from the marijuana Policy Project said, "This move debunks a lot of the nonsense from some of the anti-medical marijuana groups. They have been aggressively using false information tactics. These groups allege that there are various links between mental illness and marijuana, ignoring the fact that it is well documented that medical marijuana can be therapeutic."

The paper from the APA Assembly must be approved by their trustees when they meet in December. It refers to 12 states that already have medical marijuana laws, and says, "The threat of arrest by federal agents, however, still exists. Seriously ill patients living in these states with medical marijuana recommendations from their doctors should not be subjected to the threat of punitive federal prosecution for merely attempting to alleviate the chronic pain, side effects, or symptoms associated with their conditions or resulting from their overall treatment regimens. ... [We] support protection for patients and physicians participating in state approved medical marijuana programs."

There have been many incidents of police arresting those with prescriptions for medical marijuana, as it is still illegal under federal law. This paper was released in hopes that this would no longer happen.

As an 83 year old lady (whose name escapes me presently) once said, "What the hell is wrong with being euphoric if you're dying of cancer?" Good question!
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  • avatar Posted Nov 7, 2007 by  lensman67
    #1
    I have been pushing my father, who has been suffering from Shingles for the last three weeks, to see if his doctor will prescribe it for him. I heard a program on the radio yesterday that says that it is one of the best medicines for chronic pain.
  • avatar Posted Nov 7, 2007 by  omnithought
    #2
    @ lensman67
    I have been pushing my father, who has been suffering from Shingles for the last three weeks, to see if his doctor will prescribe it for him. I heard a program on the radio yesterday that says that it is one of the best medicines for chronic pain.


    I hear ya. I had an elderly friend who had glaucoma and whenever he partook, the pressure in his eyes would diminish, thereby relieving him of serious headaches. Unfortunately we're in a nation that favors hysteria over facts.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    #3
    It does not seem right that federal agents can arrest someone for using something that a doctor has prescribed for them.

    Vicodin is illegal on the street and it is very addictive but if you have a prescription for it you can take it.
    I have taken vicodin before and I did not like the way it made me feel but with a ruptured disc it was the only thing that would dull the pain until I had surgery.

    Maybe I would have liked marijuana a little better if it helped with the pain and did not slow my thinking down like vicodin.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  patxxoo
    #4
    If they can't find a way to control the flow of marijuana and make money off of it they will resist legalizing it, instead they will continue to change it's base properties slap a new name on it and put it in pill or spray form and then say it's not marijuana like they have been doing ....
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  phree
    #5
    @ patxxoo
    If they can't find a way to control the flow of marijuana and make money off of it they will resist legalizing it, instead they will continue to change it's base properties slap a new name on it and put it in pill or spray form and then say it's not marijuana like they have been doing ....



    They have a spray called Sativex.
    It tastes like shit.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  lensman67
    #6
    @ Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    It does not seem right that federal agents can arrest someone for using something that a doctor has prescribed for them.

    Vicodin is illegal on the street and it is very addictive but if you have a prescription for it you can take it.
    I have taken vicodin before and I did not like the way it made me feel but with a ruptured disc it was the only thing that would dull the pain until I had surgery.

    Maybe I would have liked marijuana a little better if it helped with the pain and did not slow my thinking down like vicodin.

    One of the major problems with Vicodin and all the other medications is that long use is very damaging to the liver whereas marijuana is not. In fact probably no other drug has been as eagerly studied by its opponents in the hopes of finding something bad and after all the decades of research they have come up with nothing, other than the fact that is gives you a good appetite.

    That's it. That is the sole "bad" thing they have been able to come up with!
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  patxxoo
    #7
    @phree
    They have a spray called Sativex.


    Yup I know..If you check out the web site for the drug you will find that the manufacturer is pretty quick to say it is not marijuana at all and then goes on to try to distance Sativex from the stigma of marijuana ...in Sativex they have reached their goal on making people pay and controlling the supply
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  omnithought
    #8
    @ lensman67
    One of the major problems with Vicodin and all the other medications is that long use is very damaging to the liver whereas marijuana is not. In fact probably no other drug has been as eagerly studied by its opponents in the hopes of finding something bad and after all the decades of research they have come up with nothing, other than the fact that is gives you a good appetite.

    That's it. That is the sole "bad" thing they have been able to come up with!


    I read an interview years ago with a lawyer who was taking Marinol, and he said that it was so strong that it would basically render him immobile and unable to think. He started growing his own marijuana and was able to function, and it helped keep his pills down by curbing the nausea that stemmed from his chemotherapy.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    #9
    @ lensman67
    One of the major problems with Vicodin and all the other medications is that long use is very damaging to the liver whereas marijuana is not. In fact probably no other drug has been as eagerly studied by its opponents in the hopes of finding something bad and after all the decades of research they have come up with nothing, other than the fact that is gives you a good appetite.

    That's it. That is the sole "bad" thing they have been able to come up with!


    I wasn't on Vicodin for that long. I did not like the way that it affected my thinking. It was given to me by a doctor when I was in Northern Mich. I have a high tolerance for pain but this was very severe. My own doctor was very unhappy when I got home and saw him. He said he never prescribed Vicodin.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    #10
    @ omnithought
    I read an interview years ago with a lawyer who was taking Marinol, and he said that it was so strong that it would basically render him immobile and unable to think. He started growing his own marijuana and was able to function, and it helped keep his pills down by curbing the nausea that stemmed from his chemotherapy.


    That is almost the same effect that Vicodin had on me.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  lensman67
    #11
    The US Navy conducted experiments on board ships back during the 60's. They gave a group of sailors marijuana and then had them sit around a table trying to do manual jobs that they were very familiar with like assembling small machines. Not surprisingly their hand eye coordination was slightly impaired.

    However without warning klaxon would go off and a voice on a loud speaker would yell "General Quarters (battle stations). This is not a drill!" The sailors would think that there was an emergency and suddenly the adrenaline in their system would flush the marijuana out. They would then be asked to preform the same tasks and they could do them perfectly.

    Conclusion? Marijuana will get you high but in an emergency you can still function unimpaired.
  • avatar Posted Nov 8, 2007 by  Cynthia T. [Picasso]
    #12
    @ lensman67
    The US Navy conducted experiments on board ships back during the 60's. They gave a group of sailors marijuana and then had them sit around a table trying to do manual jobs that they were very familiar with like assembling small machines. Not surprisingly their hand eye coordination was slightly impaired.

    However without warning klaxon would go off and a voice on a loud speaker would yell "General Quarters (battle stations). This is not a drill!" The sailors would think that there was an emergency and suddenly the adrenaline in their system would flush the marijuana out. They would then be asked to preform the same tasks and they could do them perfectly.

    Conclusion? Marijuana will get you high but in an emergency you can still function unimpaired.


    On Vicodin by the time my brain would have kicked in in an emergency it would have been too late.

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