Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Can medical cannabis oil cure serious diseases like cancer?

The medical value of cannabis has been hotly debated for years. Its use as a relaxant or a pain reliever is widely accepted now.
 
 Alastair Leithead reports from California.

But can cannabis do more than just treat symptoms of disease. Can it actually help cure serious illnesses, such as cancer?

view his report: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-32020114


Monday, 23 March 2015

States ban on medical cannabis to be challenged in court?

  • Two Islanders saw their petitions to allow them access to the drug, or cannabis-based drugs, rejected by the Assembly last year.

  • JEP readers overwhelmingly support legalising cannabis

     A DECISION by the States not to allow Islanders with chronic illnesses to use cannabis for medicinal purposes could be challenged in court.

    Islander who was denied access to cannabis were seeking a judicial review to overturn the decision made by the Assembly in December.

    The States to deny three chronically ill Islanders special licences to the use the class B drug for pain relief as 'irrational'.

    Two Islanders saw their petitions to allow them access to cannabis or cannabis-based drugs rejected by the Assembly last year.

    6648799
     Ann Hill who suffers from painful muscle spasms caused by multiple sclerosis

    And a 72-year-old widow suffering from multiple-sclerosis also had her petition to be prescribed the cannabis-based drug Sativex withdrawn after it emerged the Health Minister did not have the power to issue such a licence.

    Now, the pro-cannabis campaigner said people needed to move away from a 'fear' of making cannabis legal and added that due the Island's autonomy from the UK it had the chance to be a pioneer in the legalisation of the drug.

    Continue reading: http://jerseyeveningpost.com/news/2015/03/06/states-ban-on-medicinal-cannabis-to-be-challenged-in-court/

     

Thursday, 19 March 2015

Doctor explains how medical cannabis relieves pain and reduces anxiety

Dr. Ian Mitchell says knowledge of CBD and THC is essential in properly prescribing cannabis to patients suffering from pain linked to cancer, AIDS, arthritis, and multiple sclerosis. He points out that some people’s stomachs can’t tolerate traditional anti-inflammatory medications, which can cause gastrointestinal bleeding.
“I have a few little old ladies in my practice,” he reveals. “They have a cookie every night and say, ‘I don’t take my Percocet anymore.’ I would consider that a success because that’s a far less harmful way to treat their pain.”

 null
Dr. Ian Mitchell (pictured) says that in an ideal world, physicians would learn about the medicinal properties of cannabis in medical school. Doctors would be trained about different extracts from marijuana plants, including cannabidiol, aka CBD, and tetrahydrocannabinol, aka THC.
 
Mitchell says that CBD is normally about one to two percent of a marijuana plant, whereas the psychoactive agent THC is over 10 percent and getting closer to 20 percent.

Drug prohibition has led to plants being grown with a higher THC percentage because that’s what buyers prefer. The downside, he says, is that plants with higher THC levels often have drastically lower levels of CBD.

“You don’t have the antipsychotic and anti-anxiety properties,” Mitchell explains. “So all of the sudden, you’re smoking this very intense stuff that in the U.K. they call skunk. That probably does make people a bit psychotic and probably does make people very anxious, but this is because of prohibition.

“That’s part of the argument for proper regulations—so that you could choose stuff to have cannabidiol,” he adds. “I consider that essential in a medical-cannabis situation. I want to know what my patients are getting as far as the THC and CBD content.”

Research planned into PTSD and cannabis

He's part of a team awaiting approval from UBC and Health Canada to launch a study into the effect of different preparations of cannabis on posttraumatic stress disorder. He points out that PTSD is taking a tremendous toll on military families in particular.

"This is a huge deal in America," Mitchell says. "Right now, there are 22 veterans a day who commit suicide."
Paxil is the only medication that's approved for treating PTSD, but according to Mitchell, it doesn't work for most people. He says that there is "very good preliminary evidence that cannabis can be effective".
"Some of the synthetic cannabinoids like nabilone have been shown effective for nightmares associated with PTSD," Mitchell states.

He reveals that in the pending research study—the first trial of its kind—one group of research subjects would receive cannabis with CBD but no THC. Another group would consume cannabis with CBD and THC. Another would get cannabis with THC but no CBD and others would receive a placebo.

continue reading: http://www.straight.com/news/413971/kamloops-physician-ian-mitchell-explains-how-cannabis-relieves-pain-and-reduces-anxiety

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Turmeric Extract Kills Highly Lethal Pancreatic Tumors, Preclinical Study Reveals - If tumeric can do this - imagine what medical cannabis does and can do

Considering that the conventional treatment of advanced stage pancreatic cancer can result in as little as a 1% 5-year survival rate, new preclinical research on a liposomal turmeric extract that inhibits pancreatic tumor growth by 42% is all the more amazing. 

 Turmeric Extract Kills Highly Lethal Pancreatic Tumors, Preclinical Study Reveals

A promising new study published in the journal Anticancer Research, a peer-reviewed medical journal published by the International Institute of Anticancer Research, reveals a unique turmeric extract known as liposomal curcumin may provide an ideal chemotherapy alternative in the treatment of highly lethal pancreatic cancers.[1]

Curcumin is the primarly polyphenol in turmeric, and has been the subject of extensive research demonstrating its ability to kill cancer cells, with over 1,500 studies available to view on Greenmedinfo.com relevant to over 100 distinct cancer types, including 24 studies demonstrating its anti-pancreatic cancer properties. [View all the curcumin studies.]

Liposomal curcumin utilizes a successful lipid-based drug delivery system, with some liposomal formulations having already received FDA approval.  Owing to curcumin's low water solubility and subsequent low systemic bioavailability, its encapsulation into liposomes (artificially-prepared vesicle composed of a lipid bilayer) greatly improves its ability to gain entry into the body by passing through the 'glucoronidation barrier' in the liver.

Continue reading: http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/curcumin-extract-kills-highly-lethal-pancreatic-tumors-preclinical-study-revealed

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Welsh conference calls for drugs to be decriminalised

A national drug conference held in Swansea will hear later how the war on drugs is failing, and that the UK should consider changing drug policies.

 Cannabis
 Supplying medical cannabis can currently result in a sentence of up to 14 years in prison.

It follows calls last week from the deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and entrepreneur Richard Branson for most drugs to be decriminalised.

Speakers at the conference, including a former policeman and drug worker, will say current drug policies are ineffective and are failing to keep the public safe.

Instead they are echoing the call for decriminalisation, arguing that it wouldn't increase drug usage and it doesn't mean using substances is legal.

Advocates of decriminalisation say it simply means it is possible to deal with drug users outside of the criminal system, meaning young people are less likely to get criminal records and those with drug problems are more likely to ask for help.

They also say decriminalisation would reduce the level of profits criminals are able to make from illegal drugs.

Continue reading: http://www.itv.com/news/wales/2015-03-12/swansea-conference-calls-for-drugs-to-be-decriminalised/

Monday, 16 March 2015

Treat cannabis the same as alcohol and tobacco, says British MP Stephen Williams

Bristol West MP Stephen Williams says it's his personal wish to give cannabis the same legal status as alcohol and tobacco.


                      Stephen Williams MP

He argues that if you look at the hierarchy of harm caused by substances, you could not say cannabis was more harmful than alcohol.

"It terms of the damage alcohol does, in terms of domestic violence and crime, its far more harmful than cannabis," he says.

On whether this could lead to an increased culture of drug use, comparable to alcohol, he said that the main problem behind binge drinking was a pricing issue, with supermarkets able to sell alcohol too cheaply.

Friday, 13 March 2015

Limited bill to let medical cannabis extract be used to treat sick kids clears panel on 5-4 vote

The latest version of the bill to allow a non-psychotropic marijuana extract, cannabidiol oil, to be used to treat children with a rare and severe form of epilepsy in Idaho has narrowly cleared the Senate State Affairs Committee on a 5-4 vote this morning, and headed to the full Senate for amendments. Sen. Curt McKenzie, R-Nampa, the committee chairman and the bill’s sponsor, said amendments he’s contemplating include narrowing the possible uses to just intractable seizure disorders; requiring that anyone stopped with the oil prove that they suffer from intractable epilepsy or are the parent or guardian of someone who does; have a written recommendation from a doctor to use the oil; and have verification from an independent lab that the oil is cannabidiol oil and contains little or no THC, the intoxicating ingredient in marijuana.

 http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Observer/Columnist/Columnists/2010/3/13/1268486821328/A-mother-with-a-sick-chil-001.jpg

McKenzie said the bill, SB 1146, wouldn’t legalize the oil, but would provide an “affirmative defense” for those found with it that it’s used to treat the child’s seizure disorder. The bill wouldn’t allow the extract to be produced in Idaho; parents would have to procure it from out of state. “There’s 14 states that have legalized cannabidiol oil but rejected medical marijuana,” McKenzie said. “There are limited supplies, but at least it gives them an opportunity to try to get it.”

Continue reading: http://www.spokesman.com/blogs/boise/2015/mar/13/limited-bill-let-cannabis-extract-be-used-treat-sick-kids-clears-panel-5-4-vote/

Thursday, 12 March 2015

Marijuana bales tossed from car during Arizona police chase

Police in Arizona have released dramatic dash-cam footage of a high speed chase in which bales of marijuana were tossed from the car being pursued.
 

The Pinal County Sheriff's Office video shows large quantities of the incriminating drug being thrown on to the road, into the path of vehicles behind it.

Two men were subsequently arrested on suspicion of marijuana trafficking.

Police said they managed to recover 17 of the jettisoned bales, but were unable to retrieve the rest which were picked up by passing motorists.

Please view footage at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-31845760

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Keith Vaz to chair UK and global drug policies conference

Leicester East MP Keith Vaz will chair a conference on UK and global drug policies on Thursday.
 
 
The discussion comes after Uruguay and Washington State recently legalised cannabis.

The Home Affairs Committee will revisit the issue of drug policies on March 12th after a major inquiry on the subject was published in December 2012.

People in Leicester were asked for their opinions on drug policies in that inquiry with around 4,500 people voting on whether cannabis should be legalised in a Leicester Mercury poll.

Leicester East MP Keith Vaz
Keith Vaz MP

Mr Vaz said: "The Home Affairs Select Committee's inquiry on the future of the UK's drug laws in 2012 took us to the United States, Portugal and Colombia.

"It also featured Leicester, which was one of the four cities where we sought the public's views on this issue.
"4,500 people voted in a Leicester Mercury poll on whether possession of Cannabis should be legalised.

"Since that poll, Uruguay, Colorado and Washington State have all passed measures legalising cannabis, so I am sure people in Leicester, and across the UK, will be just as interested in this topic now as they were in 2012.

"I hope people will once again put forward their views before Thursday's conference, and the people of Leicester can make their voices heard."
 

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Cancer battler Karen Roberts: I'm taking medical cannabis to save my life

A GRANDMOTHER who has terminal cancer is breaking the law by taking cannabis to keep her alive.
Karen Roberts has now stopped taking all her usual medication and has instead turned to cannabis oil. And since taking it, she says her tumours have started to shrink.

The 55-year-old, of Derby, has aggressive lymph cancer and insists she does not care that what she is doing is illegal.


 Karen (pictured) lost husband Garry to leukaemia in January.

Karen said: "I'm taking this to save my life and it's obviously working.

"I don't care if it's legal or not, I have no other choice but to try whatever I can.

"Other people have been cured from taking it and that's why I've tried it. I hate taking it though, it's vile and makes me heave.

"But since taking it my tumours have shrunk – it's amazing.
"This is a huge opportunity for me. I've got nothing else to save my life. Why not give it a go?"

A cancer expert said cannabis-based drugs had showed "some promise" in tests.

 Continue reading: http://www.derbytelegraph.co.uk/Derby-cancer-battler-Karen-Smith-m-taking/story-26131709-detail/story.html#ixzz3Tzc22ln6

Monday, 9 March 2015

that cannabinoids inhibited glioma tumor growth in animals and in human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)



Gliomas (tumors in the brain) are especially aggressive malignant forms of cancer, often resulting in the death of affected patients within one to two years following diagnosis. There is no cure for gliomas and most available treatments provide only minor symptomatic relief.

A review of the modern scientific literature reveals numerous preclinical studies and one pilot clinical study demonstrating cannabinoids' ability to act as antineoplastic agents, particularly on glioma cell lines.

 

Writing in the September 1998 issue of the journal FEBS Letters, investigators at Madrid's Complutense University, School of Biology, first reported that delta-9-THC induced apoptosis (programmed cell death) in glioma cells in culture.[1] Investigators followed up their initial findings in 2000, reporting that the administration of both THC and the synthetic cannabinoid agonist WIN 55,212-2 "induced a considerable regression of malignant gliomas" in animals.[2] Researchers again confirmed cannabinoids' ability to inhibit tumor growth in animals in 2003.[3]

That same year, Italian investigators at the University of Milan, Department of Pharmacology, Chemotherapy and Toxicology, reported that the non-psychoactive cannabinoid, cannabidiol (CBD), inhibited the growth of various human glioma cell lines in vivo and in vitro in a dose dependent manner. Writing in the November 2003 issue of the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics Fast Forward, researchers concluded, "Non-psychoactive CBD ... produce[s] a significant anti-tumor activity both in vitro and in vivo, thus suggesting a possible application of CBD as an antineoplastic agent."[4]

Please continue reading : http://norml.org/library/item/gliomascancer

Thursday, 5 March 2015

CBD Oils UK Launches New Section on Website to Cover CBD Medical Studies and News

CBD Oils UK sell highly concentrated Cannabidiol oils, extracted from hemp, for medical purposes; they have now begun to track and report of medical studies and news stories about the compound.

San Francisco, CA -- (ReleaseWire) -- 02/20/2015 -- Cannabidiol is one of the primary ingredients of Medicinal Cannabis which can be extracted to use as high concentrate oil. This oil can then be used to treat and prevent disease and even repair damage that the body has endured.

The compound has been found to have amazing medicinal benefits, and is now available legally for sale in its own right. CBD Oils UK is an online store that specializes in providing the best quality CBD Oils to UK customers.

They have added a new section to their website to cover news stories and studies on the benefits of CBD in a medicinal rather than recreational context.

Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/2474905#ixzz3TaOtkhU1

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

Stoned celebs, a nutty professor - the night that telly went to pot: CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV



One solitary, sane voice spoke up during Tuesday night’s spaced out experiment, Drugs Live: Cannabis On Trial (C4).

Amid the stoned hubbub of journalists, lawyers, doctors and businessmen, one man suggested quietly that the chattering classes were not the ones at risk.

That voice belonged to a senior London policeman, retired Chief Superintendent Dal Babu. If marijuana is legalised, he said, it’s not Piers and Thomasina in Notting Hill or Hampstead who will be in danger, as they shop for joints from the drugs deli for their dinner parties.

The lives that are sacrificed will belong to young people in the poorest parts of society, already under intense pressure from drugs culture. Make cannabis legal, and for Britain’s worst-off youngsters it might as well be compulsory.

ADMIN: STOPPING THOSE IN NEED OF CANNABIS FOR THEIR MEDICAL CONDITIONS BECAUSE OF THE RECREATIONAL USE IS MADDNESS 

continue reading http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2980346/Stoned-celebs-nutty-professor-night-telly-went-pot-CHRISTOPHER-STEVENS-reviews-night-s-TV.html

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Cannabis Smoke May Benefit Asthma and Lung Functions


The unique nature of cannabis is demonstrated partly by the special characteristics of its smoke. Unlike virtually all other forms of smoke, which impair lung function, cannabis smoke may actually improve it.
That being said, vaporizing cannabis is clearly the superior alternative to smoking cannabis, as it provides the medicinal compounds of marijuana without the negative side effects of smoke (such as carcinogens and other cancer-causing chemicals).

Regardless, many studies have shown that cannabis use may benefit asthma patients and enhance general lung function by acting as a bronchodilator, rather than a bronchoconstrictor. In fact, a new study in the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics provides yet further evidence of how cannabinoids could help protect the lungs.

How THC and THC-V Benefit the Lungs

Using guinea pigs, the study measured the ability of cannabinoids to inhibit bronchoconstriction induced by inflammatory proteins. The cannabinoids in the study included THC, CBD, CBG, CBC, CBD-A, and THC-V. Interestingly, THC and THC-V were the only phytocannabinoids shown to inhibit contractions, with THC being stronger. The other cannabinoids had no effect, and adding CBD to THC did not enhance the latter’s effects. In the conclusion, THC was stated to have anti-inflammatory and antitussive activity, at least partially through activation of presynaptic CB1 and CB2 receptors.

THC-V is closely related to THC in chemical structure, being distinguished by its 3-carbon propyl side chain. It has no psychoactive properties, and may help a wide spectrum of disorders including Parkinson’s Disease. Interestingly, while THC activates CB1 receptors, THC-V blocks them without causing the negative effects (like nausea) associated with other antagonist-like compounds.

Remembering the Importance of THC

This study is particularly important, as it comes during a time when CBD is getting significant attention as the miracle cannabinoid. It is critical to remember that THC is therapeutically essential, and sometimes has benefits lacking in CBD. While CBD may be more powerful than THC in many cases, both are needed in varying quantities for different diseases.

Although CBD was not found to be beneficial in this study, more research will almost certainly determine it contributes to lung health in several ways. Previous articles show CBD may fight lung cancer and treat a variety of inflammatory lung diseases.

http://www.medicaljane.com/2015/03/02/cannabis-smoke-may-benefit-asthma-and-lung-functions/

candidate to stand in the Westminster elections for the drug reform party Cannabis is Safer than Alcohol (CISTA).

Shane is hoping to win a seat in the north London constituency of Holborne-St Pancras. He will be running against Green Party leader Natalie Bennett and high profile Labour candidate Keir Starmar.
Shane, a former Conservative Party member, defected from the party two weeks ago to join CISTA (Cannabis is Safer than Alcohol) and contest the Westminster Elections.
The party’s manifesto focuses upon the legalisation and regulation of cannabis within the UK.
- See more at: http://ulsterherald.com/2015/03/02/omagh-native-to-contest-westminster-election-on-cannabis-ticket/#sthash.QMMZVLs6.dpuf
Shane is hoping to win a seat in the north London constituency of Holborne-St Pancras. He will be running against Green Party leader Natalie Bennett and high profile Labour candidate Keir Starmar.
Shane, a former Conservative Party member, defected from the party two weeks ago to join CISTA (Cannabis is Safer than Alcohol) and contest the Westminster Elections.
The party’s manifesto focuses upon the legalisation and regulation of cannabis within the UK.
- See more at: http://ulsterherald.com/2015/03/02/omagh-native-to-contest-westminster-election-on-cannabis-ticket/#sthash.QMMZVLs6.dpuf



Shane is hoping to win a seat in the north London constituency of Holborne-St Pancras. He will be running against Green Party leader Natalie Bennett and high profile Labour candidate Keir Starmar.

 Shane-Headshot
 Shane O’Donnell


Shane O’Donnell


Shane, a former Conservative Party member, defected from the party two weeks ago to join CISTA (Cannabis is Safer than Alcohol) and contest the Westminster Elections.

The party’s manifesto focuses upon the legalisation and regulation of cannabis within the UK.





CISTA is fighting for a Royal Commission on the legalisation of cannabis and wants the government to take part in a full reform of the ‘war on drugs’ crusade in the UK



- See more at: http://ulsterherald.com/2015/03/02/omagh-native-to-contest-westminster-election-on-cannabis-ticket/#sthash.QMMZVLs6.dpuf

Monday, 2 March 2015

Howard Marks and Friends @ The Forum, London - 28/02/2015 'Back on the road for one last time, his reckless love of life undimmed'

A cannabis smuggler from the Welsh valleys who became the nemesis of the DEA as the crack epidemic began. A physics scholar at Oxford who spent most of his life developing a network linking, among others, pot dealers in London, an IRA gun runner, prog rock bands, corrupt Mexican police officers, Pakistani hashish exporters, the triads, a chum from MI6, American crime families, a Philippine brothel-owning renegade member of the House of Lords, Colombia’s Medellin Cartel and the Afghan mujahideen via the CIA. An outlaw and gourmet hedonist whose skill at building up his own legend was surpassed only by his own capacity to add to it.

http://static.gigwise.com/artists/HowardMarksAndFriends_750_2.jpg
The life of Howard Marks defies easy explanation.

Marks has been something like a hero of this writer since reading his autobiography, Mr Nice, as a teenager stuck in a suburban stasis, caught between the apathetic subcultures of nu-metal and garage. An amateur’s story of successfully merging hippy idealism – nonviolence, soft drugs, psychedelic mysticism – into the hidden and ugly world of drug traffickers and enforcers, Marks attracted tabloid notoriety in an age that might seem far more innocent than our own, with its twitterstorms of jihadist beheadings and gang warfare and drugs scares like crystal meth and krokodil rather than LSD and pot.

But this story had a dark ending too, in Marks losing his freedom to a DEA bust that also imprisoned his wife, inadvertently abandoning their three children to the care of his wife’s sister and her abusive, heroin-addicted boyfriend. Since his release from a high-security US prison in 1995, Marks has redirected himself towards the campaign to, as he puts it, “re-legalise” marijuana, securing the release of all those still left unjustly behind bars after him. He made a new trade for himself, peddling his celebrity by telling stories in one-man shows that have built his cult following among British stoners.

Now suffering terminal bowel cancer, he is back on the road for the last time, physically diminished and shorn of his shaggy hair, but his reckless love of life undimmed.

Friday, 27 February 2015

Poll: Support for medical cannabis grows in Iowa - matching the views in the UK

DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowans are warming to the idea of legalizing the use of cannabis for medical purposes, but most of them still don't want to make it legal for recreational use, a new Des Moines Register Iowa Poll shows.


An Iowa law allows some patients with epilepsy to possess a special cannabis extract, such as this Colorado-produced oil. But critics say the new law doesn’t provide a legal way to obtain the oil.


According to the poll, 70% of Iowa adults say they favor legalizing the drug for medical uses, the poll finds. That's up from 59% a year ago and 58% two years ago. However, just 30% of Iowa adults favor legalizing cannabis for recreational use, a level that is essentially unchanged from the past two years.

Iowa legislators last spring passed a limited medical-cannabis bill that would allow possession of a special marijuana extract for people with severe epilepsy. Legislators were persuaded to approve the proposal after parents repeatedly brought their disabled children to the Statehouse to lobby for the right to try the oil to treat seizures.

Patient advocates have called the new law useless, because it doesn't provide for distribution of the medication. They're pushing to broaden the law, to allow people to obtain marijuana products to treat epilepsy and a range of other issues, including cancer, Crohn's disease, chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder.

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/02/27/poll-support-medical-marijuana-grows-iowa/24154739/

Monday, 26 January 2015

Girl, 9, takes medical cannabis fight to Texas Capitol

The 9-year old from Rowlett enjoys cartoons, playing with her younger sister and playing golf. Yet in addition to the usual concerns of a kid her age, she's also fighting a life and death battle against epilepsy.

Alexis' father Dean Bortell, a U.S. Navy veteran, says Alexis' first seizure happened at their Rowlett, Texas home in July 2013.



"We were folding clothes and all of a sudden I hear my wife scream," said Dean. "I look over and Alexis has literally gone vertical. She's stiff as a board and mom's holding her. We get her down on the couch and she's shaking."

The Bortells rushed to a nearby hospital, and doctors eventually diagnosed Alexis with epilepsy. Dean says the prescribed medication Carbatrol was "like throwing gasoline on a fire."

"It was terrible. Her seizures went from mainly at night to around the clock," said Bortell. Even more frustrating, Bortell says the next drug Depakote gave Alexis tremors, spasms, and altered her personality -- and the seizures still came. Alexis describes the episodes as "very scary."

"I kinda black out, and sometimes I start chomping and shaking," she said.

When the pharmaceutical complications resulted in doctors finally ordering the medications tapered off, Dean viewed the decision as an admission of failure. The Bortells now rely solely on a supply of rescue medication, and Dean worries whether it will be enough to save his daughter if her condition suddenly worsens.

"If the big one does come, what are we going to do? I mean that scares us more than anything," said Bortell.
Desperate, the family happened to catch 'Weed 2,' the second CNN documentary hosted by Dr. Sanjay Gupta focused on the medical science of marijuana -- also known as cannabis. The documentary details the use of oils and tinctures developed from marijuana plants to stop the seizures without the harmful side effects of powerful -- and profitable -- pharmaceutical medication.

The Bortells were soon doing their own research; consulting with neurologists and paying visits to Colorado, where the company Dean works for is based and where medical marijuana is legal. On the advice of doctors there, Alexis was able to qualify for and obtain a state-issued "red card," which allows doctors to prescribe her marijuana-based medication.

"She is a legal patient in Colorado," said Dean. "She has been evaluated by two specialists who believe medical cannabis is her best shot at a normal childhood."

But there's a problem - The Bortells can't use the medication as long as they live in Texas, which bans both the medical and recreational use of marijuana. 

Texas imposes even harsher penalties for possession of oils and tinctures, the forms most commonly used by those taking marijuana for medical purposes. What's more, the Bortells could be punished for seeking marijuana-based treatments out of state.

Continue reading and watch KVUE report at: http://www.kvue.com/story/news/politics/2015/01/21/alexis-bortell/22134895/

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Dr. “Cannabis” Alan Shackelford puts medicine into marijuana, in Israel



Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:

Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?

That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?

Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.thPOcMqG.dpuf
 http://www.greenprophet.com/wp-content/uploads/charlotte-ligi-cannabis-medicine-shackelford.jpg
Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.thPOcMqG.dpuf
 Charlotte went from 300 seizures a week to none.


. “I wasn’t intending on seeing her,” Shackelford recalls on a recent visit to Israel. “I had no experience with children. My oldest patient was 103 and the treatments were working well on older patients, including some with seizures, but I wasn’t sure it would be appropriate for a child of five.”

Shackelford then poured over a stack of Charlotte’s medical records: “I decided that Charlotte would surely die if we didn’t do something to help her,” he tells Green Prophet. “As a doctor we take an oath that if we can help someone we must do what we can –– ‘cure when possible, comfort always’.”

Charlotte’s mother had brought to him a stack of convincing medical records. Then Shackelford made an appointment at his office: “There I met a girl just over a meter tall. On the way she’d had a seizure in the car, two in the waiting room and two while I was evaluating her.

“These were grand mal seizures.

“I made extensive notes.

“Charlotte was unresponsive to questions. She couldn’t eat, couldn’t drink and because nothing was working for her, she as no longer on any medicines.”




It was worth a shot.

Now the question was how to dose and administer marijuana to a little girl. And where to find plants with high levels of CBD (cannabidiol) , but only small amounts of THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the primary psychoactive compound found in cannabis? Based on ratios presented in the study Shackelford decided on 6mg/kilo (or 3 mg/pound) of Charlotte.

But Charlotte couldn’t smoke.

Normally growers in the Colorado area pride themselves on plants very high in THC, or the molecule that gets you high. This is not what the doctor wanted to give to a small child. Shackelford found a local grower that could supply a small amount to try. The ratios were 17 molecules of CBD to one molecule of THC but it cost an extraordinary $800 an ounce. This is 4 times the price of high-quality medical grade cannabis, which costs about $200 an ounce.

From this precious bit of plant Charlotte’s mom helped make an extract to give to her daughter.
Miraculously, “after the first dose the seizures stopped,” Shackelford reports. “She went from 300 seizures a week to none. But the family was concerned that they would have no more access to the drug.”

Cannabis strain called Charlotte’s Web born

Then a local group of marijuana growers, the Stanley Brothers from the area agreed to create an extract with the same high CBD content and low THC. Today this extract is called Charlotte’s Web and parents are moving to the Colorado area to access this treatment for children in similar situations.



Continue reading: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/
Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.thPOcMqG.dpuf
Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.thPOcMqG.dpuf
Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
charlotte-ligi-cannabis-medicine-shackelford
“I wasn’t intending on seeing her,” Shackelford recalls on a recent visit to Israel. “I had no experience with children. My oldest patient was 103 and the treatments were working well on older patients, including some with seizures, but I wasn’t sure it would be appropriate for a child of five.”
Shackelford then poured over a stack of Charlotte’s medical records: “I decided that Charlotte would surely die if we didn’t do something to help her,” he tells Green Prophet. “As a doctor we take an oath that if we can help someone we must do what we can –– ‘cure when possible, comfort always’.”
Charlotte’s mother had brought to him a stack of convincing medical records. Then Shackelford made an appointment at his office: “There I met a girl just over a meter tall. On the way she’d had a seizure in the car, two in the waiting room and two while I was evaluating her.
“These were grand mal seizures.
“I made extensive notes.
“Charlotte was unresponsive to questions. She couldn’t eat, couldn’t drink and because nothing was working for her, she as no longer on any medicines.”
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.H0Q6WNSn.dpuf
Thirty-five years ago an Israeli researcher documented the case for medicinal cannabis to treat epilepsy. It was one of these studies by a Prof. Raphael Mechoulam that Denver-based physician Dr. Alan Shackelford read when he was debating one of the hardest questions of his career:
Should he, could he? give a 5-year-old pot?
That girl, Charlotte Figi (pictured below), was fighting for her life. Cursed with a rare form of epilepsy called Dravet’s Syndrome, Charlotte had about 300 seizures a week, some bringing her to the brink of death. Her parents were at their wits end and wanted to try her on medicinal cannabis. They read somewhere that it might work.
charlotte-ligi-cannabis-medicine-shackelford
“I wasn’t intending on seeing her,” Shackelford recalls on a recent visit to Israel. “I had no experience with children. My oldest patient was 103 and the treatments were working well on older patients, including some with seizures, but I wasn’t sure it would be appropriate for a child of five.”
Shackelford then poured over a stack of Charlotte’s medical records: “I decided that Charlotte would surely die if we didn’t do something to help her,” he tells Green Prophet. “As a doctor we take an oath that if we can help someone we must do what we can –– ‘cure when possible, comfort always’.”
Charlotte’s mother had brought to him a stack of convincing medical records. Then Shackelford made an appointment at his office: “There I met a girl just over a meter tall. On the way she’d had a seizure in the car, two in the waiting room and two while I was evaluating her.
“These were grand mal seizures.
“I made extensive notes.
“Charlotte was unresponsive to questions. She couldn’t eat, couldn’t drink and because nothing was working for her, she as no longer on any medicines.”
- See more at: http://www.greenprophet.com/2015/01/dr-cannabis-alan-shackelford-puts-medicine-into-cannabis-in-israel/#sthash.H0Q6WNSn.dpuf

Monday, 19 January 2015

Support Adam Koessler: 50,000 people sign petition supporting dad facing jail for giving dying daughter cannabis oil

Nearly 50,000 people have signed a petition calling on politicians to help a dad who faces criminal charges after giving his dying daughter cannabis oil.

Australian Adam Koessler was arrested and charged earlier this month after giving two-year-old Rumer Rose the oil to relieve her symptoms of late-stage cancer - something he claims led to a "miraculous" improvement in her condition.


But his bail conditions mean he cannot have contact with his sick daughter, who is now in intensive care after her condition deteriorated.


 Adam claims Rumer Rose, 2, who has stage 4 cancer, showed 'miraculous' signs of improvement after she was given the medicinal oil

By this evening, almost 50,000 people had signed a petition calling for Queensland premier Campbell Newman and justice minister Jarrod Bleijie to intervene, saying "it is inhumane and unjust to keep a parent, who acted out of love for his child [and] wanting to prolong her life, away from her during such severe illness".

The petition adds: "Medical cannabis has been legalised in many countries and jurisdictions around the globe. There is ample evidence to show that it has many beneficial effects for cancer patients without the harmful side effects and other associated risks of current drug treatments. In fact working in conjunction with the recommended treatment regime, medical cannabis has also been proven to alleviate these adverse side effects.

Continue reading: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/adam-koessler-50000-people-sign-5001305