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Oregon Medical Association
Advises Doctors To Wait For Federal Approval December 17, 1998 From STAT, the newsletter of the Oregon Medical
Association (Marijuananews note: There is a great irony here in the name of the publication. "Stat"
in a medical setting means "immediately," as when a doctor is paged in a
hospital, "Dr. McCaffrey, please report to the psychiatric ward, stat!"
Before Cooperating With Patients Under New State Medical Marijuana Law,
Defeating Purpose of Initiative
See
Oregon And Washington
State Medical Marijuana Laws Go Into Effect 2 Articles
and
Oregon Medical
Marijuana Update From a Reader -- Fear Rules The Day
and
Debate About Medical
Marijuana Among Oregon Doctors
Tells Us More About Doctors Than About Marijuana.
and links
I know many doctors who are brave individually, so it is odd that they become cowards
collectively.)
See
A Portrait Of The
Doctor Leading The Oregon Medical Marijuana Drive
and
Oregon Medical
Association Declines to Oppose Medical Marijuana; Believe It or Not, This Is A Victory
Volume: XXVIII, No. 11
MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT: DONT ACT YET
Although Oregons medical marijuana law passed by the voters last month became effective last week, physicians are advised against taking action until all issues are resolved. It may be months before the Health Division adopts rules laying out exactly how the act will be implemented.
Meanwhile, a task force called into session by Oregon Attorney General Hardy Myers is
studying a multitude of thorny enforcement issues the law presents. OMA, along with the
Health Division and the Board of Medical Examiners, is participating in the process. At
this point there is insufficient guidance for physicians called upon to provide written
documentation for the issuance of a registry card. More significantly, the federal
government has not announced what it will do with respect to those who aid in the growing,
possession, delivery, and use of this controlled substance. The Oregon law does not
immunize physicians from either federal criminal exposure or from revocation of their DEA
certificates.
(Marijuananews note: If this is taken at face value, Oregon doctors
are being told to wait for federal approval, which would appear to be an attempt to
block the implementation of some of the provisions of the new medical marijuana law. The
whole purpose of the initiative was to bypass the Federal government.)
OMA director of medical legal affairs Paul Frisch advises, "At this point it would be mistake for physicians to participate in an activity which may or may not be the subject of conflict between state and federal law, much less a complicated scenario currently lacking an administrative rule infrastructure. Physicians who are willing to participate in the medical marijuana process would be well advised to wait until the Health Division makes its rules and the federal government takes an official position on the act itself".
(Marijuananews note: The Oregon medical marijuana initiative was deliberately written to keep doctors from having to write prescriptions for marijuana which would put them in possible violation of federal laws. A California Federal court has issued a restraining order to keep the Feds form harassing California doctors who help patients under Prop 215.) require("content_bottom.inc"); ?>