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Psychiatric Times. Vol. 27 No. 1
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NEWS 

The Past, Present, and Future of Medical Marijuana in the United States

By John Thomas, JD, LLM, MPH | January 6, 2010
New Haven, Connecticut
Professor Thomas is a former litigator who teaches law and medicine, advanced law and medicine, civil procedure, and commercial law at the Quinnipiac University College of Law. His publication topics range from health policy to mental health treatment to acoustic music. He is an accomplished fingerstyle guitarist who has performed at regional festivals, on live radio, and in clubs, coffee houses, and bookstores in the New Haven, Conn, area.

On October 19, 2009, the Office of the Deputy US Attorney General issued a memorandum, “Investigations and Prosecutions in States Authorizing the Medical Use of Marijuana.”1 The memo announced a federal policy to abstain from investigating or prosecuting “individuals whose actions are in clear and unambiguous compliance with existing state laws providing for the medical use of marijuana.” The memo made clear, however, that it did not “legalize marijuana or provide a legal defense to a violation of federal law.” Rather, it was “intended solely as a guide to the exercise of investigative and prosecutorial discretion.”

This article seeks to place the attorney general’s action in historical, medical, and legal context.

A concise medical history

Healers have turned to cannabis, known in the vernacular as marijuana, for its medicinal qualities for more than 5 millennia. Indeed, the world’s oldest surviving medical text, the Chinese Shen-nung Pen-tshao Ching, recommends marijuana to reduce the pain of rheumatism and to address digestive disorders.2

The herb had an established use in Western medicine, too. Between 1840 and 1900, more than 100 articles extolling its therapeutic virtues appeared in American and European medical journals.3 In 1851, the United States Pharmacopoeia included the “extract of hemp,” in its catalog of medicinal amalgams.4 That same year, The Dispensatory of the United States of America proclaimed, “The complaints in which [marijuana] has been specially recommended are neuralgia, gout, rheumatism, tetanus, hydrophobia, epidemic cholera, convulsions, chorea, hysteria, mental depression, insanity, and uterine hemorrhage.”5 A little more than a decade later, the 1864 edition of the Pharmacopoeia gave precise instructions in the preparation of this medicine.6

American physicians routinely prescribed marijuana until the late 1930s.7 It would not be until 1970 that the law would intervene to proscribe all uses of the herb.

Nonetheless, there remains controversy within the medical profession regarding both the safety and efficacy of medically prescribed inhaled marijuana smoke. (For a medical perspective on this topic, see the Commentary by Ronald Pies, MD.) For example, one recent review noted that “tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and other [cannabinoid-1] receptor agonists can have an undesirable CNS impact, and, in many cases, dose optimization may not be realizable before onset of excessive side effects. . . . [moreover] cannabis herbal material (“medical marijuana”) may present fatal uncertainties of quality control and dosage standardization. Therefore, formulation, composition, and delivery system issues will affect the extent to which a particular cannabinoid product may have a desirable risk-benefit profile and acceptable abuse liability potential.”8

Furthermore, medical marijuana use may pose particular problems for some psychiatric patients, since marijuana may exacerbate positive symptoms of schizophrenia and increase the risk of psychotic relapse.9

A concise legal history

The Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 was the first federal restriction on the herb’s use and distribution.10 It imposed a $1 per ounce tax on marijuana purchased for medical purposes and $100 per ounce for any other purchases. In an early example of the health care policy chicanery that today’s physicians know all too well, the act imposed sufficiently onerous paperwork requirements for medicinal use that physicians ceased prescribing the herb shortly after its enactment.11

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by orison squirrel | February 08, 2011 5:47 AM EST

"We have spent over a trillion dollars trying to eradicate the world's most beneficial plant off the face of the earth. Imagine what a better world this would be if that money had been spent on treatment, education and studying the medical benefits of marijuana."
-- Steve Hager - High Times Editor (1988 - 2003)




"But at this point, I'd be in favor of legalization. I wouldn't encourage anybody to smoke any substances. But I don't think it should be stigmatized as an illegal substance. Tobacco smoking causes far more harm. And in terms of an intoxicant, alcohol causes far more harm."
~ Donald Tashkin,
National Institute on Drug Abuse


I left Western Pa in the mid 70's and it was always good pot, and with the Steelers stitching up the generation gap a tad, and Leary overturning the Marijuana Tax Act. It was mostly overlooked as a problem and cops would usually confiscate it and thats it. They had dry counties for booze, but medicinally they could treat it as they do drug stores. State stores sell the hard booze, or did then. Its all based on Nixon's lies and the lies are getting ridulous and repeatative. It's the Commonwealth with the Whiskey Rebellion. I think its ripe for a reality check. Though fossil fools, drugs, booze, prisons, cops and rehabs will always hide behind kids, perpetuating this farce for profits.



Commonwealth
Thus commonwealth originally meant a state or nation-state governed for the common good as opposed to an authoritarian state governed for the benefit of a given class of owners.

by Mary Lynn Mathre | January 25, 2010 10:01 AM EST

As noted in the article above - cannabis never belonged in Schedule I, yet it remains in this forbidden category. NIDA has sponsored countless studies to support the "reefer madness" about the dangers of cannabis, but by 1998 cannabis researchers began to learn about the endocannabinoid system. This discovery is helping us understand why it is so safe and why it has such a wide variety of indications for use. With the prohibition, illicit users/dealers search for ways to make it more potent (as in mooonshine during the prohibition)and now studies indicate that it may be the high THC content and very low CBD content found in the skunk variety that lead to psychotic reactions. Cannabidiol or CBD is not psychoactive and helps modulate the THC found in natural cannabis. This may explain why many patients dislike dronabinol (synthetic THC in sesame oil) - THC is responsible for the high and too much may not be a good thing. Learn more about the science and visit www.medicalcannabis.com - patients need this herbal medicine now.

by Art Zwerling | January 24, 2010 12:36 PM EST

I believe there are scientific inquiry issues that need to be a resolved before we decriminalize marijuana. Certainly maintaining cannabis preperations in DEA Scedule 1 is sheer insanity. As a starting place we may want to consider placing established therapeutic cannabinoids like dronabinol, nabilone and Sativex (when and if released in the US) in a less restrictive category. Given the incredibly complex pharmacognosy and pharmacology of crude cannabis preperations, I'm not sure that making medical marijuana freely available is well advised until we have more well controlled prospective studies clearly demonstrating it's therapeutic advantages over available cannabinoid preperations that utilize a less deleterious route of administration with a standardized preparation of predictable potency. Certainly we can do better than to leave folks that have a documented medical need for cannabinoids out in the grey zone of illegal but not prosecuted! Art Zwerling





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