Washington State Medical Association Betrays Its Patients And Shows Its Collective Incompetence

(Ed. note: Recently, the German association of pediatricians issued an apology and statement of regret for their failure to stand up for the rights of their members – mostly Jews and political dissidents -- who were killed by the Nazis over half a century ago.

I wonder how long it will take for the AMA and various state medical associations in DEAland to get around to apologizing for abandoning to the narcs their sick, dying and disabled patients who found that only marijuana helped relieve their suffering.

In Nazi Germany it would have taken real courage to defy Hitler, but in DEAland the delegates at the Washington State Medical Association are victims not of their cowardice but of their arrogance, ignorance and incompetence. More and more individual doctors and state medical associations are now standing up against the persecution of the sick and dying.
See
CMA Joins Many Others Backing Removal Of Marijuana From Schedule I Prohibitive Status
It is certainly late in the game for the converts, but it makes the Washington State Medical Association look even worse. The people have already written off the opinions of organized medicine, while the doctors complain that people take vitamins and herbs without consulting them. With this kind of behavior they should look in the mirror and take a Prozac.)

From the Seattle Times
See
Seattle Times Carries Scathing Attack On Hypocrisy Of Opponents Of Medical Marijuana

opinion@seatimes.com
http://www.seattletimes.com/
October 4, 1998
By Carol M. Ostrom, Seattle Times staff reporter

DOCTORS WON’T BACK MARIJUANA AS MEDICINE

Despite an impassioned plea by a former president of the organization, the Washington State Medical Association voted yesterday not to endorse a ballot initiative that would legalize marijuana use by terminally ill and chronically debilitated patients.

The association, which represents 8,000 physicians around the state, did go on record to urge completion of studies of marijuana’s effectiveness as a medicine.

The association’s annual meeting, which began Thursday in Bellevue, adjourned yesterday.

The resolution supporting the initiative was sponsored by Dr. William Robertson, who said this year’s Initiative 692 is "far more limited" than last year’s initiative, which the association voted not to support.

The initiative has "stringent requirements" that would limit its use to a small number of terminally ill and debilitated patients. Some patients believe it helps them, said Robertson, a medical director of the Washington Poison Center.

Some cancer and AIDS patients say smoking marijuana is the only thing that helps quell their nausea, vomiting or lack of appetite. Although the active ingredient in marijuana is available in pill form, some patients say they vomit up the pill, that it takes too long to work or makes them high for too long, or that the dose is not easily regulated.

Dr. Sandra Counts, who specializes in addictions and in chronic pain, urged the group to send a message to Congress "to not treat a drug as a moral thing."

"I don’t see any difference, personally, between marijuana, Valium or Percocet," she said. Plenty of patients abuse the last two, she said, and yet those drugs are not made unavailable to everyone.

Dr. Peter Marsh, the organization’s outgoing president, argued that no scientific data shows marijuana is an effective treatment.
(Ed. note: In fairness to the doctor that does not appear to be what he said.)

"We have no problem with saying we’re in favor of any drug that shows pharmacologic effectiveness," he told the group’s study committee Friday. "If there is good data and good evidence to support that smoked marijuana does something that’s not available with any other medication, we’d have no problem endorsing this at all."
See
Perhaps The Single Most Damning Article On Medical Marijuana Fiasco I Have Ever Read – Without Intending To Be
(Ed. note: The standards for FDA approval have nothing to do with whether there are benefits that are not "available with any other medication." All that is necessary is that a medicine be relatively – not absolutely -- safe and effective for some – but not all -- patients. As the doctors should know – surely know – not everyone responds in the same way to various medications. Consequently, it is common to have a number of different medications available to treat patients who may not respond to the "drug of choice" – meaning the most commonly prescribed.)

But, he added, "in actual fact, there is no data, to our knowledge at least, that supports that - that there is an effective use of smoked marijuana that cannot be achieved any other way."
(Ed. note: Three points. First, if that is the case, then why do seriously ill people – and their doctors – want to use it? Second, does he think that everyone can afford the expensive pharmaceuticals that he thinks work for everyone – even though their manufacturers make no such claim? At which medical school did they teach him that people who are vomiting can swallow pills and keep them down long enough for them to be effective?)
See
Why would anyone want to smoke a medicine? Isn't smoking per se bad for you?
and
Costs keeping 'rescue' drugs from patients