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Physician Advocates for Medical Marijuana
Rutland Herald ^ | Feb. 26, 2006

Posted on 02/26/2006 7:55:05 AM PST by Wolfie

Physician Advocates for Medical Marijuana

Vermont -- As he opened his remarks about medical marijuana, Dr. Joseph McSherry said he couldn't be as informative as he would like to be.

"I asked a very good friend, who happens to be a medical marijuana patient, what I should tell you today," McSherry said. "He said to tell you not to ask a doctor. Doctors don't know (expletive) about medical marijuana."

McSherry, a neurophysiologist and PhD associated with Fletcher Allen Medical Center and the University of Vermont, said his friend is largely correct: There have been few scientific studies on the effects of marijuana as a medicine, and even less research has been conducted on its medical effects in humans.

"You'll probably be more educated than your doctor by the time we get through," McSherry told his audience at the Godnick Center in Rutland on Friday.

He walked the audience through the limited medical data on cannabis and the properties of the chemicals in marijuana other than THC that can have beneficial effects.

Canabanoids, McSherry said, can boost the effectiveness of other painkillers, inhibit the growth of tumors and alleviate wet macular degeneration, which causes blindness in some cases.

"We're just beginning to scratch the surface of this iceberg," he said.

McSherry said that inhaled marijuana can be very effective at treating sudden swift pains, while many other painkillers, including marinol — a legal prescription drug that is a capsule of THC in sesame oil — can take too long to take effect.

"I don't approve of smoking for anybody," he said. "There's got to be a better way of doing it, but the U.S. government hasn't been interested in doing any research.

"If you eat it, the chemicals peak in two to four hours. Eating it is probably the worst way of intaking THC," he said. "If you inhale it, THC levels peak in a few minutes and it actually goes away in the first hour."

He noted that researchers in other countries are trying to develop different types of medical cannabis for patients.

Two members of the audience who said they use the drug for medicinal purposes offered compelling testimony about its benefits. Neither identified themselves.

The first patient said that at one point he had been on 17 different medications to treat his multiple sclerosis — some to counteract the side effects of other medications.

"Now I think I'm on four medications now," he said. "I'm not on medications for the side effects of medication. I'm not drugged out or high. From 17 meds, down to four."

A second patient said he had lost more than 50 pounds while undergoing chemotherapy before using marijuana to counteract the nausea.

"I went from 236 pounds down to 176," he said. "Part of the problem was the sickness of chemo. I couldn't hold down food, and marinol did not work for me. Cannabis did work."

Members of the audience had many questions about medical marijuana, from its chemical properties to the intricacies of growing plants to use for medicine.

"If you have a seed that has a known history of consistent product, you will get a consistent product medically," McSherry said. "That's why I think patients ought to be able to grow their own."

One audience member wondered how patients who don't grow it can access medical marijuana.

"Where does the pot come from if you're not a green thumb person?" she asked.

McSherry said "compassionate clubs" have formed in California that allow medical marijuana patients to bring in prescriptions to be filled with marijuana of a known quality rather than forcing patients to rely on what they can find on the black market, he said.

"In Vermont, if you have a friend or a grandson … you can make a provision to register with the state that you're a registered patient and they're a registered grower," he said, adding that Vermont's medical marijuana law does not shield users or growers from federal prosecution.

McSherry sees access to the drug as an uphill battle. He said many doctors are resistant to the notion of medical marijuana.

"There are very definitely a lot of doctors who are very adamant it's not a medicine," he said. "There are doctors that believe if it were a medicine, the FDA would approve it and pharmaceutical companies would make cannabis that you can take as a product.

"But patients' definition of a medicine is a different thing," he added.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: marijuana; medicalmarijuana; wod; wodlist
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To: Mojave

Good connection, Mojave. Meth and pot are the same type of drug and have the same effect on a person. Heroin, cocaine, barbituates, morphine, pot...all the same thing. All killers, all adictive. You're on your usual roll today.


301 posted on 03/01/2006 6:51:53 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: Supernatural
Meth and pot are the same type of drug

Soup and sandwich.

302 posted on 03/01/2006 6:54:19 AM PST by Mojave
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To: Wiseghy
Of course they don't have data on driving under the influence of THC. Unfortunately, those accidents also kill other people. That would seem to be the biggest obstacle in my mind to legalization.

Is it a big reason to ban the drug alcohol? If not, why not?

303 posted on 03/01/2006 6:54:22 AM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: Mojave

Source?


304 posted on 03/01/2006 6:56:04 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: Supernatural

Source for what?


305 posted on 03/01/2006 6:59:57 AM PST by Mojave
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To: Mojave

Meth and pot are the same type of drug
Soup and sandwich.


There's your belief. Prove it and give your source.


306 posted on 03/01/2006 7:29:02 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: Supernatural
Meth and pot are the same type of drug

That's your quote.

[Soup and sandwich.]

That's mine.

Oregon: Meth, pot bust nets 4 arrests

Police have seized a half-pound of methamphetamine and several ounces of marijuana from a home on Marsh Lane in Medford.

Meth, pot bust


307 posted on 03/01/2006 7:33:35 AM PST by Mojave
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To: Mojave
By the same "logic," if there was a can of Sprite in the home Sprite and meth are like soup and sandwich. You're a funny guy.
308 posted on 03/01/2006 7:36:03 AM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: Know your rights

Sprite's an illicit drug? You're a veritable fount of amazing "facts".


309 posted on 03/01/2006 7:38:04 AM PST by Mojave
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To: Mojave
Sprite's an illicit drug?

No less than soup or sandwiches. Sorry your analogy is working so poorly for you.

310 posted on 03/01/2006 7:39:02 AM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: mikey565

In the same vein (no pun intended), the whole notion of calling drugs such as marijuana 'narcotics', skews the debate right off the bat.


311 posted on 03/01/2006 7:39:21 AM PST by Bill Nigh
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To: Mojave

"Meth and pot are the same type of drug"

I was, of course, being sarcastic. My posts on these various pot threads should leave no doubt of that.

A bust where pot and meth are both present do not mean that they are the same type of drug. You lose again.

Of course, I have given you an impossible mission. Prove you beliefs. Once again, you come up empty. I don't blame you for not wanting to prove yourself wrong.

But that's OK, everyone else has proven you wrong repeatedly. That's plenty good enough for me, and for the rest of us who know the truth.


312 posted on 03/01/2006 8:13:01 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: mugs99

Ping!


313 posted on 03/01/2006 10:15:14 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: Supernatural
I was, of course, being sarcastic

LOL...You need to use the /sarcasm tag with Roscoe...
.
314 posted on 03/01/2006 10:24:14 AM PST by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: mugs99

Old Roscoe is dead in the water and sinking fast. The ship of lies is going down.


315 posted on 03/01/2006 10:28:21 AM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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To: robertpaulsen
"'A 1000 watt setup good for about 20 square feet would cost more.'"

"Who are you growing for -- Orange county?"

I'm not growing for anyone. I do have a lot of gardening experience though and I have grown plants indoors under lights. I've only grown orchids though to full maturity, and I've started a lot of fruits and vegetables and herbs (basil, that sort of thing, not pot) indoors under lights to get a good start on the growing season before it's warm enough to plant outside.

Those thousand watt systems are not at all uncommon for people growing legal plants indoors, and they aren't uncommon for people growing small amounts of pot either. Anything under 400 watts is crap for plants with high light requirements because the light is not intense enough and light strong enough to promote good growth doesn't go far from the bulb. Light intensity drops off considerably the farther you get from the bulb. A fluorescent tube for instance is only going to provide good light for plants with high light requirements a few inches from the tube. A 1000 watt hps on the other hand is going to throw strong enough light several feet. You put it up pretty far from the plants so the intense heat doesn't burn them and there is still enough light intensity to promote growth for plants that grow a few feet tall. The light can provide enough light for the bottom of the plant as well as the top. That's why people often use them for things like tomato plants. With low wattage lights they have to keep the plants really short or there won't be enough light for the lower parts of the plant. A hundred watt hps will cover maybe a couple of square feet worth of very short plants packed together tightly. With a bigger light, the plants can be spread out some to let them breath and to minimize the risk of mold or plant diseases and pests that destroy plants from spreading before they are noticed.

It is true that a guy with a thousand watt system who packs his plants tightly and goes to a lot of effort to maximize production could produce a couple of pounds of buds five times a year or so if he knows what he is doing, and if he has separate chambers with more lights to house his mother plants and his clones that are maturing to the level they are ready to flower in the flowering chamber. But that involves a lot of work. Someone just growing for personal use though might like a 1000 watt system so he can just plant some seeds and have a few plants in his growing room and not have to mess with them so much. He wouldn't have to pack them together and worry so much about mold. He wouldn't have to check the plants everyday and keep raising the light higher as they grow. He wouldn't have to worry about having a chamber or room for mother plants or one for clones he is growing out to maturity. He could just pull the roughly 50% of his plants that turn male and let the remaining females grow out till they provide him enough pot for six months or a year, so he doesn't have to continually mess with plants, not being able to leave on vacations or business trips or anything like that.

Besides, thousand watt systems aren't much more expensive than 400 watt systems, and 100 or 250 watt systems can easily cost just as much as a 400 watt system. The ballasts and bulbs and reflector hoods and so on cost about the same for all of these setups because they cost about as much to make and because the lower wattage bulbs and ballasts are not used as much in other applications as the higher wattage stuff. The 400 watt bulbs are the ones most commonly used in non-growing applications followed by the 1000 watt bulbs, and the fact that so many of these things are produced to sell for lighting parking lots, factories, streets, and so on by so many different companies makes the ballasts and even the bulbs less expensive, provided people don't buy the fancy bulbs designed just for plants, which aren't really much better than the industrial bulbs for that purpose.

The power requirements are higher for higher wattage systems, but not as much as you might think because the higher wattage systems are much more efficient than the lower wattage systems. We use shop lights for orchids because they have low light requirement. Good T8 systems with electronic ballasts will produce about 100 lumens per watt. Ours though are cheapo T12 40 watt tubes that are not so efficient. A 1000 watt hps will produce about 145 lumens per watt. A 400 will produce around 125 lumens per watt, and a 100 watt hps will only produce around 95 lumens per watt and of course watt light it does produce will not be intense enough to provide the kind of light high light requirement plants need more than ten or twelve inches from the bulb. I looked into a 1000 watt system for our orchid room a while back and calculated the energy cots running that bulb twelve hours a day at about $25 per month. It would probably cost more now. A 400 watt system would cost about half in monthly electric bills watt a 1000 watt system would cost.

Running 18 shop lights in the orchid room burns about 1440 watts, not including the watts burned through ballast loss from the magnetic ballasts which aren't particularly efficient. For all that we are producing about 90,000 lumens, compared to 145,000 from a 1000 watt high pressure sodium lamp that would might be enough to light the whole room fine even though the plants are spread across the room on several wire shelving units. Shoot, two 400 watt systems would produce more light and be cheaper to run, but they'd cost a good bit up front. And of course these shop lights wouldn't be good for tall plants with high light requirements because the light they produce loses intensity required for those types of plants within a few inches of the tubes. When you start tomato plants or something with them you have to keep the bulbs right over the tops of the plants and raise the fixtures every day as the plants grow, and if you start your seeds too early and have to keep the plants growing under the lights too long before it warms up enough to plant outside, they'll get skinny, leggy, and unhealthy, and fall over because there isn't enough light.
316 posted on 03/01/2006 10:48:34 AM PST by TKDietz
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To: Supernatural
The ship of lies is going down.

It sure is. Every year they tell us they need more money to kick down more doors and throw more people in the dungeon. This war isn't about drugs. It's about money and sin.
.
317 posted on 03/01/2006 10:49:55 AM PST by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: Know your rights

That's the difference between you and your addiction to polls and me - I take polls for what they are---flagrantly biased.

Hint: try a detox progarm for poll addiction.


318 posted on 03/01/2006 12:37:07 PM PST by eleni121 ('Thou hast conquered, O Galilean!' (Julian the Apostate))
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To: eleni121
I take polls for what they are---flagrantly biased.

So how do you propose to suppport your claim that "you do not seem to be getting anyone on your side in the US"?

319 posted on 03/01/2006 12:39:26 PM PST by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: eleni121

What is "NYS" as referred to on your homepage?


320 posted on 03/01/2006 12:50:15 PM PST by Supernatural (Lay me doon in the caul caul groon, whaur afore monie mair huv gaun)
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