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MEDICAL MARIJUANA BILL GAINS SUPPORT IN CONNECTICUT

marx2k

Active member
Veteran
by Dirk Perrefort, (Source:News-Times)

26 Mar 2007

Connecticut
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HARTFORD -- Ridgefield native Kathleen M. Anderson never thought she'd be promoting the legalization of medical marijuana. "If someone told me 10 years ago I would be an advocate, I would have said no way."

Then, nine years ago, her now 23-year-old daughter was diagnosed with reflex sympathetic dystrophy syndrome, a chronic disease that results in intense pain, especially when touched, that increases over time.

"I'm a conservative mom," she said, "but any parent who has had to watch their child suffer for years as I have would support this effort."

Anderson, who now lives in Berlin, Conn., brought her daughter to the State Capitol Friday along with two large bags filled with hundreds of empty bottles from the prescription medications she has tried since she was diagnosed at age 14.

Anderson said she's tried everything to help relieve her daughter's intense pain, which can flare up at the slightest touch of her skin, including surgery that cut in half her daughter's ganglion nerve, located near the base of the spine.

"Our doctor said it had a 90 percent success rate," she said. "It's the worst thing we could have done. Now the sweat glands don't work on the right side of her body and she has problems with her heart rate and blood flow."

Anderson said one of the few substances that has helped her daughter is marijuana.

"If someone touches her arm, it swells up and she's in agony," she said. "Just a few puffs help to lessen the pain and the swelling goes down in minutes.

"Unfortunately, she could be arrested for it. Going to jail would kill my daughter. Just putting handcuffs on her wrists would result in excruciating pain."

She added that her daughter doesn't experience any of the substance's euphoric effects.

Popular talk show host Montel Williams, who spoke Friday in Hartford about his use of marijuana to reduce the pain and spasms he suffers as a result of multiple sclerosis, also said he doesn't experience the euphoric effects.

Williams said most viewers of his show never get to see his spasms -- or the three injections and 90 pills a day he takes to try to relieve his pain.

He added that he takes more than $2,500 worth of prescription drugs a month, including Oxycodone, Percocet and Vicodin, but nothing helps his pain more than marijuana.

"I spent 22 years in the military in the Marines and the Navy," he said. "I put my life on the line for this country over and over again. I'm begging the people for what I almost died for -- life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

Williams received a standing ovation when he announced what he planned to do after leaving the press conference.

"I have to pray that the local law enforcement gives me a right of passage to my state," the New York resident said. "When I walk out of here I will smoke pot."

Opponents of legislation that would allow doctors to prescribe marijuana and allow patients with a prescription to grow it for their own use held their own press conference Friday.

State Rep. Toni Boucher, R-Wilton, a staunch opponent of the proposal, said that while there are hundreds of chemicals in marijuana that have yet to be scientifically tested, testing that has been completed shows there are serious adverse health effects.

They include lung cancer, respiratory and breathing problems, loss of motor skills, and an increased heart rate associated with sudden death syndrome.

"Marijuana is a harmful drug that doesn't save or improve lives," Boucher said. "With the greater use and abuse of this drug, we are now seeing the damage to health that smoking marijuana produces.

"Smoked marijuana is associated with higher concentrations of tar, carbon monoxide, and carcinogens than even cigarette smoke," she said.

Dr. David Kloth, founder of Connecticut Pain Care in Danbury, and the immediate past president of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians, said there are limited studies on the effectiveness of marijuana as a pain medication, although it has been used for nausea and as an appetite stimulant for chemotherapy patients.

"The few studies that have been done have not found conclusively that it's good for pain management," he said. "It may work in combination with other medications, and some people may benefit from it.

"In general, however, the majority of pain physicians in this country would not support the use of marijuana for pain management."

Kloth said that while the substance could act on some receptors in the body with pain-relieving effects, those who could benefit are few and far between.

"The one thing in favor of it is that it's safe," he said. "Nobody is going to overdose and die from marijuana. It's probably safer than alcohol."

The proposed legislation passed the Judiciary Committee last week with a vote of 32 to 8, with several area legislators, including state Sen. David Cappiello, R-Danbury, and state Rep. Bob Godfrey, D-Danbury, voting in favor of the measure.

The proposal would still need to be approved by the House and Senate before it goes to Gov. M. Jodi Rell for her signature. A similar proposal passed the Senate last year with a vote of 19 to 15, but died in the House from inaction.

Cappiello said he supports the measure because medical decisions are better left with doctors than lawmakers.

"Medical doctors should be able to make decisions based on their patients' needs," he said. "Under our laws now doctors can prescribe a slew of painkillers, including morphine and derivatives of cocaine, but as a legislature we're saying under no circumstances can they prescribe marijuana, even if it could provide some medical benefit.

"Shouldn't we let doctors make that decision?"
 
D

DJ_highst_

Go get em Conn. :smile: Get er done

Good luck to everyone pushing for the bill.

The more states we get on board with medical Cannabis, the more we can push the issue at the federal level.
 
G

Guest

Does anyone know when the next event in Ct concerning this will be held? I want to help..thx
 

ngakpa

Active member
Veteran
cheers for the post - though it ought really to be in the legislation section :)
 

wickyd

Member
Update: heh, good news!

Source: Drugpolicy.org

Medical Marijuana Clears Major Hurdle in Connecticut
Tuesday, June 5, 2007

In this year's second major success for DPA's medical marijuana efforts, the Connecticut State Legislature passed a medical marijuana bill last week. Late Friday night, the state Senate voted 23-13 to pass HB 6715, the Compassionate Use Act. Now the bill has now been sent to Governor M. Jodi Rell.

The Connecticut vote, which represents the culmination of a five year effort, comes just two months after the governor of New Mexico signed a medical marijuana bill into law for that state.

Gov. Rell has not yet said whether she will sign the Compassionate Use Act, but earlier in the session she indicated possible support when speaking to reporters. HB 6715 will become law either if Gov. Rell signs it or if she does not veto it.

Connecticut has had a medical marijuana law on the books since 1981, but the existing law is broken because it requires a doctor to prescribe marijuana. Due to federal law, physicians can be sent to prison and have their medical licenses revoked for prescribing marijuana.

HB 6715 would correct this flaw by allowing medical doctors to recommend marijuana after all other options for relief have been tried and proven to be insufficient. The bill would also allow patients to possess and use marijuana as recommended by their doctor.

According to a 2004 report by the UConn Center for Survey Research and Analysis, 83% of Connecticut residents support access to medical marijuana.

This legislative session, that support has been apparent in the news media. An editorial by a Connecticut medical marijuana patient was published last week in The Day, and the Hartford Courant and Danbury Times have both written supportive editorials.

If Governor Rell receives the bill from the Secretary of State before the legislative session ends on Wednesday June 6, she’ll have five days to sign or veto the bill. If received after Wednesday, she’ll have 15 days to sign or veto the bill. If Gov. Rell neither vetoes nor signs the bill, it will automatically pass into law.

“I am just 32 years old and yet due to my medical condition I feel as if, at times, I am 92,” said Joshua Warren, a patient in Wilton, CT, who suffers from chronic neurological Lyme disease. “I did not ask for this condition nor would I wish any of my pain and other symptoms on anyone else. I hope Gov. Rell will have compassion for me and for others and sign this bill.”

If you live in Connecticut, now is the time to make sure Gov. Rell knows you support access to medical marijuana. Send the governor a message.

In addition to efforts in Connecticut and New Mexico, DPA is focusing on medical marijuana at the federal level with work on the Hinchey-Rohrabacher amendment, which would prohibit the federal government from undermining state medical marijuana laws. The amendment would protect cancer, AIDS and other patients who use marijuana for medical reasons from federal prosecution. It will likely come to a vote in the House later this month.
 
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