Marijuana is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known.
No one has ever died from an overdose unlike Opiates and it has a wide variety of medical applications:
- Relief from nausea and increase of appetite
- Reduction of intarlobular eye pressure
- Reduction of muscle spasms
Marijuana is frequently beneficial in the treatment of the following conditions:
Tenosynovitis – the tender swelling of the rope or cord like structures (tendons) which connect muscles to the bones
HIV/AIDS. Marijuana can reduce the nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite caused by the ailment itself and by various HIV/AIDS medications.
Glaucoma. Marijuana can reduce interlobular pressure, thereby alleviating the pain and slowing — and sometimes stopping — the progress of the condition. (Glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness in the United States. It damages vision by increasing eye pressure over time.)
Cancer. Marijuana can stimulate the appetite and alleviate nausea and vomiting, which are common side effects of chemotherapy treatment.
Multiple Sclerosis. Marijuana can limit the muscle pain and spasticity caused by the disease, as well as relieving tremor and unsteadiness of gait. (Multiple sclerosis is the leading cause of neurological disability among young and middle-aged adults in the United States.)
Epilepsy. Marijuana can prevent epileptic seizures in some patients.
Chronic Pain. Marijuana can alleviate the chronic, often debilitating pain caused by myriad disorders and injuries.
Many patients also report that marijuana is useful for treating arthritis, migraine, menstrual cramps, alcohol and opiate addiction, and depression and other debilitating mood disorders.
Marijuana could be helpful for millions of patients around the world.
People currently suffering from any of the conditions mentioned above, for whom the legal medical options have proven unsafe or ineffective, have two options:
Continue to suffer from the ailment itself; or
Illegally obtain marijuana — and risk suffering consequences such as:
an insufficient supply due to the prohibition-inflated price or scarcity;
impure, contaminated, or chemically grown marijuana;
arrests, fines, court costs, property forfeiture, incarceration, probation, and criminal records.
Background
Prior to 1937, at least 27 medicines containing marijuana were legally available in the United States. Many were made by well-known pharmaceutical firms that still exist today, such as Squibb (now Bristol-Myers Squibb) and Eli Lilly. The Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 federally prohibited marijuana. Dr. William C. Woodward of the American Medical Association opposed the Act, testifying that prohibition would ultimately prevent the medicinal uses of marijuana.
The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 placed all illicit and prescription drugs into five “schedules” (categories). Marijuana was placed in Schedule I, defining it as having a high potential for abuse, no currently accepted medicinal use in treatment in the United States, and a lack of accepted safety for use under medical supervision.
This definition simply does not apply to marijuana. Of course, at the time of the Controlled Substances Act, marijuana had been prohibited for more than three decades. Its medicinal uses forgotten, marijuana was considered a dangerous and addictive narcotic.
A substantial increase in the number of recreational users in the 1970s contributed to the rediscovery of marijuana’s medicinal uses:
Many scientists studied the health effects of marijuana and inadvertently discovered marijuana’s astonishing medicinal history in the process.
Many who used marijuana recreationally also suffered from diseases for which marijuana is beneficial. By fluke, they discovered its therapeutic usefulness.
As the word spread, more and more patients started self-medicating with marijuana. However, marijuana’s Schedule I status bars doctors from prescribing it and severely curtails research.