Australian Medical Association
Endorses Medical Marijuana Trials,
Decriminalization For Personal Use;
Alaska Legislature Limits Voter-Approved Medical Marijuana Law
NORML Weekly Press Release
May 20, 1999
Australian Medical Association Endorses Medical Marijuana Trials,
Decriminalization For Personal Use
May 20, 1999, Sidney, New South Wales: The government should make marijuana available
as a medicine to seriously ill patients, and remove criminal penalties for the possession
of small amounts of marijuana, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) declared recently.
They said that drugs should be treated as a health issue, not as a criminal matter.
"The Australian Medical Association is the latest group to join a worldwide
coalition of health organizations calling for legal access to medical marijuana and an end
to prohibition," NORML Foundation Executive Director Allen St. Pierre said.
The AMAs position statement regarding decriminalization states, "Prison
sentences are ... inappropriate for offenses related to the use, or possession for
personal use, of small amounts of cannabis."
For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of The NORML
Foundation @ (202) 483-8751. To view a listing of health organizations supporting access
to medical marijuana, please visit: http://www.norml.org/medical/mjorgs.html.
To read the AMAs position statement, please visit: http://domino.ama.com.au.
Alaska Legislature Limits Voter-Approved Medical Marijuana Law
May 20, 1999, Juneau, Alaska: The Legislature approved a measure this week limiting
legal protections for medical marijuana patients. The bill, S.B. 94, amends provisions of
a November initiative that legalized the use of medical marijuana under a physicians
supervision.
Alaskans for Medical Rights spokesman David Finkelstein called the revised law
unnecessary, but conceded it will still protect many bona fide medical marijuana patients
from state prosecution. "While we opposed the involvement of the Legislature in the
initiative process, the final version of S.B. 94 will still work for patients," he
said. Finkelstein noted that grassroots opposition to the Senate bill persuaded
legislators to eliminate some of its most restrictive provisions.
Senate Bill 94 removes legal protections for medical marijuana patients who refuse to
register with the state health department, or who possess greater amounts of marijuana
than authorized by state law. The states present medical marijuana law, approved by
58 percent of voters, affords a legal defense to non-registered patients and those who can
demonstrate adequate need to possess large quantities of medical marijuana.
The Department of Health and Social Services will approve regulations next month to
begin licensing qualified medical marijuana patients. Senate Bill 94 includes a $58,000
appropriation to fund the confidential patient registry program.
Provisions requiring physicians to certify that "there are no other legal
treatments that can be tolerated by the patient that are as effective" as marijuana,
and limiting the types of diseases that marijuana may legally treat, were eliminated from
S.B. 94. The bill also includes language allowing nurse practitioners and physicians
assistants to legally recommend marijuana to a patient.
Governor Tony Knowles (D) is expected to sign the bill shortly.
For more information, please contact either R. Keith Stroup, Esq. of NORML @ (202)
483-5500 or David Finkelstein of Alaskans for Medical Rights @ (907) 277-2567. To download
a copy of S.B. 94, please visit: http://www.legis.state.ak.us/basis21.htm>.
Illinois Adopts Legislation To Study Hemp Production
May 20, 1999, Springfield, IL: The Illinois House approved a resolution yesterday
allowing university researchers to study the economic viability of industrial hemp. The
Senate had already approved a similar resolution, S.R. 49, on March 23, 1999.
"Hemp is a profitable economic crop in Western Europe and Canada," NORML
Executive Director R. Keith Stroup, Esq. said. "There is no doubt that this study
will find it potentially profitable for Illinois farmers as well."
House Resolution 168 authorizes a 13-member task force to investigate hemps
economic potential as a cash crop, and identify legal obstacles to production. The
committee will report its findings to the Legislature by January 1, 2000.
A handful of Legislatures have approved state-sponsored hemp research studies since
1996. The most recent study, prepared by North Dakota State University, estimates that
hemp could yield profits as high as $141 per acre to farmers. North Dakota became the
first state to legalize domestic hemp production last month.
For more information, please contact Allen St. Pierre of The NORML Foundation @ (202)
483-8751 or NORML board member Don Wirtshafter of The Ohio Hempery @ (740) 662-4367. To
download a copy of the Illinois resolutions, please visit: <http://www.legis.state.il.us/>.
Marijuana-Like Drugs Could Treat Schizophrenia, Study
Suggests
May 20, 1999, Irvine, CA: A marijuana-like chemical produced naturally in the brain
appears in higher levels in schizophrenics, a recent study of ten mentally ill patients
revealed. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, speculated that the body
may be producing higher amounts of the chemical, called anandamide, to fight the disease,
the Orange County Register reported.
"Our findings of high levels of anandamide in these patients does indicate that
[it] plays an important role in the development of the disease," Daniele Piomelli, an
associate professor of pharmacology at UCI, said. He noted that "many schizophrenics
smoke marijuana and claim it eases some of their symptoms."
Previous research at UCI found that the brains nerve cells use anandamide to
modify the effects of the neurotransmitter dopamine, which is responsible for stimulating
movement and other behavior. Scientists believe that excessive dopamine production causes
some symptoms of schizophrenia, which affects one percent of the population. Current
medication for schizophrenia block dopamine production, but are not always effective and
have side effects.
"The idea is to develop novel medicines that use marijuana as a model,"
Piomelli said. "We want to activate some of the cannabinoid receptors in the brain
without producing the high. ... By understanding how the anandamide system works similarly
to marijuana, we can explore ways to treat [schizophrenia and other] diseases more
effectively."
Piomellis said he hopes to expand his study to 200 patients, but warned that
anandamides effects on schizophrenia are still not well understood.
His findings will appear in next months issue of the journal, Neuroreport.
For more information, please contact Drs. Lester Grinspoon of Harvard Medical School @
(617) 277-3621 or John P. Morgan of the City University of New York (CUNY) Medical School
@ (212) 650-8255.