spacer
spacer
header
Main Menu
Home
Search
Donate
About OPN
Contact Us
Membership
OPAN
News
Event Calendar
Projects
FREE Cannabis
Jury Power
Medical Maps
Speakers
OPN on the Radio
Legal
Media
Patient/Doctor
Patient Profiles
Online Store
Library
Links
FAQs
Interactive
Email Discussion
Teamspeak
MySpace
OPNTalk Forums
OPNews
OPNews Signup
Recent Issues
Archives
Video
Mikeee Show
Ohio Patients Imprisoned
Randy Brush
In Memoriam
 
Home arrow News arrow OPNews March 2007 arrow US MA: MARIJUANA RESEARCH A NEW FIELD AT UMASS?

US MA: MARIJUANA RESEARCH A NEW FIELD AT UMASS? PDF Print E-mail

What a long, strange trip it's been for Lyle E. Craker, a professor at the University of Massachusetts who wants to grow marijuana for medical research.

An administrative law judge recommended on Monday that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration allow Craker to grow high-grade marijuana on the Amherst campus.

Here again is a brief history of Craker's frustrating efforts to study marijuana, beginning in June 2001 when he applied to the DEA for a permit:

The DEA said first that it had lost his application.

Later, the DEA said he had not filled out the forms correctly.

When that failed, the DEA sent two DEA agents to the Amherst campus to discourage university officials.

And, finally, the DEA rejected his application.

Craker appealed, launching a process that eventually ended with the recommendation on Monday by Judge Mary Ellen Bittner, who said that granting the permit would be in the public interest.

The DEA objects to Craker's research because it fears the marijuana will fall into the hands of young people who will turn into potheads. For a federal government that has waged a decades-long war on illegal drugs with little success, it must be painful to admit that marijuana might have some value as a prescription drug.

According to a study published Monday in the journal Neurology, patients given marijuana said it eased their HIV-related foot pain known as peripheral neuropathy. There are no approved drugs to specifically treat that kind of pain.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration counters that there are few sound studies to support the medical use of marijuana. That's because the DEA is blocking the studies, and very little federal funding is available in this research field.

Without the sort of research that Craker proposes, it is unlikely we'll ever know how many uses might be found for marijuana.

Craker's journey isn't over yet. The judge's ruling on Monday is not binding, and a decision will eventually be made by the head of the DEA, Karen Tandy.

No more smokescreens, please.

Newshawk: Please Write a LTE www.mapinc.org/resource/#guides
Pubdate: Sat, 17 Feb 2007
Source: Republican, The (Springfield, MA)
Copyright: 2007 The Republican
Contact: letters@repub.com
Website: http://www.masslive.com/republican/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3075

spacer
Join/Donate
via Paypal
GoodSearch: You Search...We Give!
Ohio Medical Marijuana Act

Please contact your legislators regarding the Ohio Medical Marijuana Act!

The Zoretic Patient Defense Fund
To donate to the Zoretic Patient Defense Fund, OPN's patient legal defense fund, simply click the above button. Before entering the amount, please indicate that your donation is for the Zoretic Patient Defense Fund in the Payment For: text box. Thank you for your contribution!

Advertisement
War on Junk
A riotous exploration of prohibition policies, told through the narrative lens of a future America in which the government outlaws junk food in response to widespread obesity. Click on the image to buy this book now. 10% of the purchase price will be donated to OPN.

 
Copyright 2000 - 2005 Miro International Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
spacer