- Source: The Observer
- London,
November 2001
- Anthony
Browne
CANNABIS
A MEDICAL MIRACLE - IT'S OFFICIAL
Scientific Tests Of 'Wonder Drug' Give Patients New Hope.
Cannabis is a 'wonder drug' capable of radically
transforming the lives of very sick people, according to
the results of the first clinical trials of the drug.
Tests sanctioned by the Government are proving far more
successful than doctors, patients and cannabis
campaigners ever dared hope.
Some of the patients are simply calling it a 'miracle'.
Taking the
drug - which it is still illegal for doctors to prescribe
- has allowed a man previously so crippled with pain that
he was impotent to become a father; a woman paralysed by
multiple sclerosis to ride a horse for the first time in
years; and a man who couldn't sit up in a chair on his
own to live without a carer.
Until now claims of the benefits of the drug for certain
conditions have been anecdotal. But the preliminary
results of the UK government trial, started last year,
suggest that 80 per cent of those taking part have
derived more benefit from cannabis than from any other
drug, with many describing it as 'miraculous'.
The results make it almost inevitable that the Government
will bow to public pressure and legalise the cultivation
of cannabis for medical purposes by 2002. Scientists now
predict that cannabis - first used for medicinal reasons
5,000 years ago - will follow aspirin and penicillin and
become a 'wonder drug' prescribed for a wide range of
conditions.
Bowing to pressure for a less hard-line attitude, the
Home Office started the first major cannabis trials in
the world to see whether there was any scientific basis
for its use as medicine. A licence was granted to a
specially formed drug company to grow the plants under
controlled conditions in a secret location in southern
England. Twenty-three patients,
suffering from multiple sclerosis and arthritis, were
recruited on to the first trial, and given daily doses of
cannabis by spraying it under the tongue, before wider
trials were started.
The remarkable stories of the patients will be revealed
on the BBC programme Panorama , which was granted unique
access to them.
Alex Ure, a former paratrooper, suffers from a severe
spinal condition. The pain was so bad he considered
suicide; he found legal painkillers turned him into a
zombie and he couldn't have sex with his wife, Wendy, for
five years. But after starting the trial he became a
father. 'I couldn't even bend down and play with a child
before - I could do anything now,' he said.
His doctor, Willy Notcutt, of James Paget Hospital in
Great Yarmouth, was sure the cannabis was responsible:
'His pain has been sufficiently controlled to engage in
sex again,' he said.
Tyrone Castle, a former publican, started suffering from
multiple sclerosis when he was 21 and became so
incapacitated he needed two helpers to winch him out of
bed. He also suffered from uncontrollable spasms.
Cannabis has
transformed his life.
'It has really helped sort out my spasms. It helps me
sleep because I don't spend the night jumping about. The
difference in my legs is unbelievable - they are no
longer stiff as a board,' he said.
Jo, the wife of a school chaplain, suffered so badly from
multiple sclerosis she would struggle to lift her legs up
in the air six times. After she started the trial, she
could lift her legs 25 times. 'It's miraculous, really
extraordinary. I've never had any sort of relief of this
kind, and I've tried pretty well everything,' she said.
Notcutt said the trial was a success: 'The results have
exceeded what I dared hope for. We're getting 80 per cent
of patients good-quality benefit from the cannabis. For
some we are getting almost total relief from their pain,
with pain scores going down to zero.'
Doctors believe cannabis could eventually prove useful in
conditions such as osteoporosis, cancer, HIV and Aids,
arthritis, spine injury and certain forms of mental
illness.
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