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Medical Marijuana Requests Climb Sky High
Dispensary owners report 50 to 300 percent rise since Obama took office
The number of ailing people turning to medical marijuana to ease their symptoms has spiked this year, say dispensary owners in some of the 13 states where it's legal.
Requests have jumped anywhere from 50 to 300 percent, they say, since President Barack Obama took office and signaled that he won't use federal marijuana laws to override state laws as the Bush administration did. Others say the economic downturn may also be responsible as more people without insurance are seeking alternatives to costly medications.
In the past few months, marijuana co-ops, clubs, businesses and even lawyers who have advocated for looser dope regulations say they've been inundated with requests for information and certifications that permit people to use marijuana for medical purposes.
"I have been flooded with calls," reported Seattle attorney Douglas Hiatt, a long-time marijuana advocate. "It's ‘Where can I find a doctor [to prescribe it]? How can I start a co-op?' You wouldn't believe it."
Under the George W. Bush administration, federal authorities maintained that federal marijuana laws took precedence over state law, even in states that had approved therapeutic cannabis. But Obama indicated during the presidential campaign that he supported the controlled use of marijuana for medical purposes, saying he saw no difference between medical marijuana and other pain-control drugs.
"My attitude is if the science and the doctors suggest that the best palliative care and the way to relieve pain and suffering is medical marijuana, then that's something I'm open to," Obama said in November 2007 at a campaign stop in Audubon, Iowa. "There's no difference between that and morphine when it comes to just giving people relief from pain."
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In February, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder pledged to limit Drug Enforcement Administration raids of prescription cannabis dispensaries to those businesses and organizations that break both state as well as federal laws.
"Our focus will be on people, organizations that are growing, cultivating substantial amounts of marijuana and doing so in a way that's inconsistent with federal and state law," he said.
300 percent increase
Hard
numbers and state-to-state comparisons are difficult to come by because
state laws vary and because some states are still creating their
programs; New Mexico expects to license its first legal marijuana
producer this month. But the state of Colorado has tracked registered
medical marijuana users since implementing its law on June 1, 2001. As
of the end of 2008, there were 4,720 applications received, almost all
of which had been approved. But as of February 28 of this year, that
number stood at 6,796, an increase of 2,076 in just two months.
"I have had a 300 percent rise at my business," reported the owner of Colorado's Boulder County Caregivers, a marijuana dispensary. (She asked not to be named since she also works in local government.)
Her numbers are rising despite obstacles that remain in the path of those seeking access. For example, many doctors are reluctant to authorize their patients to use marijuana either because its efficacy has not been proven in rigorous trials, shown to be superior to other drugs, or because they themselves fear risking their own federal license to prescribe medications like opiate pain killers if they are seen to be defying federal drug law.
"I have legitimate cancer patients who cannot get a doctor to sign," the Boulder dispensary owner said. "Their doctor will say ‘Talk to your oncologist,' and the oncologist will say ‘Talk to your other doctor.' So I see the same doctors' names over and over. Patient records show the same two clinics because so many go there since their own doctors will not do it for fear of federal retribution."
Some organizations leap this hurdle by providing their own doctors.
"I have 12 doctors working with us right now," said Paul Stanford, director of The Hemp and Cannabis Foundation, based in Portland, Ore. THCF has started clinics in eight states, often by bringing along one of its own paid doctors who happens to be licensed in that state.
Stanford claimed his clinics are booming, too, with about 50 percent more calls and patient certifications than before the new administration took office.
In addition to the Obama administration's position on medical marijuana, demographics may also be a co-factor in the overall rise. Many people born after World War II have had at least some exposure to marijuana, and now that the government has indicated it will be more lenient, might be more inclined to turn to the party drug of their youth to ease the maladies of age. Few people under 65, "are truly naïve to cannabis," suggested Dr. Frank Lucido, an Oakland, Calif., physician who has long been a leader in California's medical marijuana community.
Economy may be playing role
Lucido
has seen an increase in patients, too, but a slight one, a much smaller
bump than he would have expected. It's possible, he speculated, that
because so many dispensaries have opened in California, some offering
quickie - and often dubious - medical exams to certify patient need,
that the total number of medical marijuana consumers has boomed, but
that many are avoiding more stringent practitioners like himself.
One final possibility for the increase in numbers is economic. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that at least 45 million Americans under age 65 are now without health insurance.
As the number of medical marijuana outlets expands, and fear of federal drug charges diminishes, some of those people, faced with paying out of pocket for pharmaceutical drugs or for cannabis, "will turn to medicine that is good for a whole bunch of ailments, that you can grow yourself and not spend a tremendous amount of money on," Hiatt said. "That's very appealing to lots of people."
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28 Comments so far
Show AllI would certainly rather see a rise in requests for a miracle plant that grows in nature than a rise in requests for the poisonous drugs that BIG PHARMA pushes on our neurotic and mesmerized population...especially the young and elderly...via the uncountable and unending hypnotic commercials on the corporate controlled media of TV..
If there is such a thing as "Human Rights" then the absolute requirement is that adult individuals have control over their own bodies. No government, religion, group or individual has the least right to tell an adult what they can ingest, whether for nourishment, relief or entertainment. Any outfit that is regulating the lives of people in it's jurisdiction in such a mean way is nothing more than a criminal organization if they persecute anyone for exercising the #1 rule.
Every drug you see advertized, tells of horrendous side effects that sound much worse than the conditiion, once you find out, What the drug is for.
Side effects of Pot.... Sleepy and munchies and compared to any legal prescription Drug, Pot is the safest.
We have many Human Rights on paper but without a Justice Dept and president to enforce the Bill of Rights and all human rights, it is just on paper.
Jim, Never before it is legal, but then try this-
Follow a stream to where folks don't go, plant seeds a foot in from the water. Check back, growing? Surround with chicken wire to keep deer out. Come back in October. Guerilla Growing. Initially popularized by Che.
You could do this at four twenty in five days on four twenty....six months goes by.
Sugar Magnolia
Blossoms Blooming
Head's all busy but I don't care,
Saw my baby down by the river,
Knew she had to come up soon for air,
Or a hit, and she did.
Can't they just legalize the stuff and have it available in stores for adults?
Yeah, but DuPont, Big Oil, Georgia Pacific, Weyerhauser, and Big Pharma will not allow it. Their bribery, I mean lobbying, efforts over the last decades have worked well.
I know weed can be a godsend for ppl undergoing certain types of chemo, but will drs start prescribing it for recreational use as they do with V!4grA ??
We should have the right to grow our own and share it without a doctor's consent but this is a start.
We began a petition for Medical Marijuana here in Florida and I think we can get it on the ballot.
Thank you President Obama for getting the er...ball rolling.
Nuf with the smart double entendres, already:
Thank you President Obama for getting the joints rolling.
I'm sure you agree, ezely.
I'm quite bowl-ed over by these puns. I think weed do pretty well taking this show on the road.
I guess this'll be the pot calling the bowl black, but I agree there's a weedspread double standard that's higly open to puns. That show's been on a roll for over forty harvests.
Such pot-humour is a great way of publicizing the fun of high living. Seems to me the cerebral stimulations caused by pot for some five decades has spread to increase the willingness in our culture for fun puns - not only pot-puns. That is very good. Maybe soon the formal English language will encompass the term 'self-irony', i.e. the ability to laugh at ourselves in an competition-free, enlightening way, revealing own inconsistencies to our selves. Pot provides good training in that.
The ingrained official attitude has some fabulous double-standards on pot-use. It's fine and important to joke about the sheer impossibility of a pot-ban, but we need to make clear arguments too and make them dominate. If not, the argumentation becomes a big joke only - a joke the official view doesn't even get. And pot is too good to be blown off as a joke. The fun pot-puns aim at those who already get it, argument aim at those who don't. It's a higher aspiration, so to speak.
With medical marijuana cannabis has finally developed a formal pressure-group, one that can't be made suspicious-looking. That's no joke. It's as serious as only the best of jokes can be.
Would that be the high road?
Marijuana is "medicine that is good for a whole bunch of ailments, that you can grow yourself and not spend a tremendous amount of money on".
Excellent quick quote summing up facts.
Of course, a LOT of interested parties out there doesn't want anyone to NOT "spend a tremendous amount of money on" unnecessary drugs because growing pot is (nearly) free.
But the atmosphere for pot is improving - rapidly now.
"In February, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder pledged to limit Drug Enforcement Administration raids of prescription cannabis dispensaries to those businesses and organizations that break both state as well as federal laws." blah, blah, blah.
"Our focus will be on people, organizations that are growing, cultivating substantial amounts of marijuana and doing so in a way that's inconsistent with federal and state law," he said." blah, blah, blah.
The only problem about this is that Holder is not enforcing his own edict and is still busting legitimate pot clubs in San Francisco in the first week of April 2009. Like his boss, Barack Obama, Eric Holder cannot be trusted to keep his word. As our newly elected king of indifferent equivocation, Obama sent his press secretary out with an opposite message affirming that pot would remain illegal as recently as the last week of March 2009. This is a Wizard of OZ kind of presidency where actions never match the political rhetoric. People at least knew where they stood when Bush was in office. Obama seems to ALWAYS put out conflicting messages. He is the king of the flip flop.
michael jordan
http://sites.google.com/site/apolloguide/
yep, mj, smoke and mirrors.
let's see, if "organic" bell peppers are bringing two bucks apiece at the grocery store, i'm thinking "organic" pot on the free market, even the black market. there just have to be a few thousand yuppies shopping at whole foods in austin texas who'd form a line at my kiosk.
so which line do i stand in for that state-sponsored dispensary license?
wait, where's the remote? what happened to my
Jeevee
Why aren't cigarettes, cigars, alcohol ingestion, drugs with massive side effects illegal? Two-way equation: corruption breeds hypocrisy.
good comments...marijuana is one among many of the inherent rights of the individual, beyond the opinion\input of any 'other'...the 'other' input (control) we currently experience is, factually, criminal, as is the control around some other natural substances\plants...the 'medical' route is a good one to use, temporarily, but the end result should be the complete removal of any laws, whatsoever, regarding this wonderful plant...
"There's no difference between that (marijuana) and morphine when it comes to just giving people relief from pain." Not so, Obama. Marijuana gives relief with few side effects and is non habit forming. Morphine, on the other hand, is very habit forming. Not that I'm against legalizing all drugs. But get your facts straight. There's too much lying and misinformation out there.
The generation now becoming old is for the most part comfortable with this easy-to-grow herbal palliative. It makes no profit for corporations though, so will continue to be demonized...
When I have glaucoma or am under chemo, I will once again grow some, and it will be the right thing to do.
"Natural Law asserts that humankind has inherent in its very design, as evidenced by its very existence, certain inalienable and God-given rights. These rights can be readily determined by assessment of actions for harm and benefit; if a certain action is beneficial to a person, and if that action causes no harm to others, then execution of that action should be an inherent right associated with human existence."
From the Universal Life Church web site.
Makes certain federal/state laws absolutely superfluous, from speed limits to cannabis use.
PATIENT: Doctor, I think I need medical marijuana.
DOCTOR: Well, do you have any symptoms indicating a condition for which medical marijuana would be palliative?
PATIENT: Yes. I get really depressed when I run out of weed.
[From the standup comedian Ron White.]
One of the interest groups who desire for marijuana to remain a schedule 1 substance is the pharmaceutical industry. They don't want the competition, as marijuana is significantly cheaper than many prescription medicines.
Damn legalizing weed and letting the gov't tax us with yet another 'sin' tax. Just decriminalize all drugs and stop trying to nanny adults. My body, my choice.
Having DOPE in times of no FREEDOM,
____ ____ is better than ____ ____
Having FREEDOM in times of no DOPE
No Dope - No Freedom
I just made the hook-up. I'll be putting 6 clones under my lights tomorrow. Strawberry something, supposed to have a fast cycle, 14 weeks.
Order seeds from Canada and guerrilla grow.
It is Springtime. Plant.
God grows things,
But we can water them.
My god, 20 after the hour-it is 4:20 somewhere, that is good enough por moi.
Here is a cool trick-Bong gross? use salt mixed with alcohol to clean it. Glass pipe gross? Boil the mf, smells rude, but like new in 10 min.s
canyaspareawannaforthehempless? Always sister, always.
Blessings to You and Your plants Joe.
21 years ago I visited Findhorn in Northern Scotland. It was there
were I could see for my self, what impact communication with the
plants had. Eileen Caddy, the founder of the community, had the
ability to channel and was told that outstanding results could be
achieved if one would open oneself up to the aetherical blueprints
of the plants called Devas. When I saw the vegtables and fruits
that had grown there I was blown away about their sheer size and
taste. Far beyond organically grown. Plants would grow there that,
even considering a climate pocket at Findhorn Bay caused by the Gulf
Stream, are nowhere else present or able to grow in Northern Scotland.
She wrote books about her experiences and explains how to connect with
the Devas. Ever since then I have dreamed about applying those
principles to Mari Juanita. 21 years later I am able to start growing
without fear of repercussions. Being a resident alien made my own
growing operation a highly risky business until now. Now we are allowed
to grow 24 plants and tonight I will start to grow some girls. :-)))
So my thoughts are with You and Your babies.
Unfortunately the Big Island has had really wet weather since November
and the harvest is about 4 to 6 weeks late. :-( Patience is the order
of the day...
Another great cleaning method is an 'Ultrasound Bath'. When I had a
company for electronics way back in Germany I would use it to clean
printed PC boards and other stuff that gets really sticky and tarry...