‘Yes’ to Clinical Trials for Medicinal Cannabis
‘Yes’ to Clinical Trials for Medicinal Cannabis.
Auckland Greencross has endorsed the NZ Law Commission’s recommendations that clinical trials of cannabis are undertaken and that bone fide users of medicinal cannabis become exempt from prosecution.
Spokesman for the medical cannabis users’ support group, Stephen McIntyre today said both proposals would find favour with the general public as two out of three New Zealanders support allowing cannabis for medical use.
“Sixty five percent of submissions to this report – a figure consistent with online polling – favoured the establishment of a scheme allowing people suffering from chronic, debilitating or terminal conditions to legally access and use herbal cannabis,” he said.
“Most medical users of cannabis, alongside the serious condition they’re forced to cope with on a daily basis, have the added stress of finding reliable access to quality medicine from a trustworthy source, compounded by fear of being caught by the police.”
“Auckland Greencross wants to see an exemption for both arrest and prosecution given to all bone fide patients once they have been given the approval of their doctor or specialist to use cannabis therapeutically.”
Mr McIntyre said that Auckland Greencross members must have their doctors’ support before being issued with ID cards as evidence to that fact.
“A national database could be established along similar lines allowing patients to possess ID that proving that they legitimately possess cannabis for their own use and are accordingly free from criminalisation.”
Mr McIntyre went on to say that while there is abundant overseas’ evidence showing the efficacy and safety of medicinal cannabis, he welcomes local clinical trials provided they speed up process legalising its use here.
“We know that for our members cannabis is the best medicine around – preferable in both efficacy and absence of unwanted side-effects to the opiates and other drugs they’re prescribed – and that many of them would be willing to participate in trials to establish that.”
“Ultimately Auckland Greencross welcomes the day when cannabis is available on prescription in New Zealand and medical grade crops are licensed and regulated in the same way as other controlled drugs,” he concluded.
ENDS