November 15, 1998
Independent on Sunday
sundayletters@independent.co.ukwww.independent.co.uk
Legal cannabis for research nears harvest
By Vanessa Thorpe
The first licensed cannabis crop to be farmed in Britain for medical research will be
harvested early next month.
Plants grown in secret greenhouses somewhere in southern England, from seeds developed
in Holland, will be analysed by Dr Geoffrey Guy and his team during the run-up to
Christmas.
See
House of Lords To
Hear Licensed UK Medical Cannabis Grower BBC To Air Special On Medical Marijuana
Then in the spring, the doctors company, GW Pharmaceuticals, plans to begin
testing the produce on a number of specially recruited patients. The research will confirm
Britains place as a world leader in the race to understand and exploit the
therapeutic properties of the illicit drug.
Dr Guy, who was in Washington last week to speak at a conference
on scientific research into cannabis,
(Marijuananews note: Dr. Guy was at the NORML conference.)
told the IoS: "Six months ago there were still a lot of people who thought
that my company was a little oddball. Now it is acknowledged that cannabis and its
extracts are going to be extremely important drugs."
GW Pharmaceuticals will be co-ordinating its research with the Royal Pharmaceutical
Society, whose scientists are hoping to concentrate on perfecting a pill or other form of
oral delivery for the drug. Dr Guy, however, will also look into the possibility of
delivering cannabis by inhaler or injection.
Next months historic harvest will come hard on the heels of the long-awaited
House of Lords report into cannabis use. Last Wednesday, the Science and Technology
Committee of the Upper House recommended the legalisation of cannabis for medicinal use.
It applauded Dr Guys work and urged the Government to consider allowing doctors to
prescribe the drug to named patients.
See
The House of Lords
Press Release On Medical Marijuana; Medical, Yes; Legalization, No
Many in Britain who suffer the symptoms of multiple sclerosis already take the drug to
relieve pain, risking prosecution. (The Multiple Sclerosis Society
estimates that at least 1,000 of the 85,000 sufferers in Britain currently use cannabis.)
The Lords report highlights the urgency of tackling this problem and of taking a
compassionate attitude which does not bring the law into disrepute.
Lord Perry of Walton, the former GP and professor of pharmacology who chaired the
committee, has stressed that a situation in which the police, the courts, doctors and
otherwise law-abiding citizens are all increasingly bending the rules is ultimately
untenable.
"If doctors were able to prescribe to named patients, then those patients could
simply show their prescription to the police whenever necessary," Lord Perry said. "At the moment the law condemns a lot of people to a lot of
suffering."