Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jan 2004 Source: Waukesha Freeman (WI) Copyright: 2004 The Waukesha Freeman Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/770 Website: http://www.freemanol.com/ Author: Gary Storck Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/glaucoma Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Robert+Randall KEEPING MEDICINE FROM PATIENTS IMMORAL January is National Glaucoma Awareness Month. This eye disease affects an estimated 3 million Americans and is one of the leading causes of blindness. Born with glaucoma in Waukesha nearly 49 years ago, I lost much of my eyesight as a small child before the disease was even detected. Because of that, I strongly urge everyone to have regular eye exams for themselves and their families. While many patients can find symptomatic relief from daily use of one eyedrop in each eye, others with more severe cases may be prescribed several daily medications, needing to be taken several times per day. When medications are ineffective or their side effects intolerable, surgery is often tried; but it is risky, and a significant number of patients find surgery more damaging to vision than glaucoma itself. In the early 1970s researchers found marijuana had the ability to lower the elevated eye pressures that damage the optic nerve and cause blindness from glaucoma. In the mid-1970s a glaucoma patient from Washington D.C., Robert Randall, was arrested for using marijuana to treat his glaucoma, which was rapidly destroying his vision. Randall won his case using a medical necessity defense and in turn sued the federal government. He eventually was granted a monthly supply of marijuana from federal authorities, which he received up until his death in 2001, successfully preserving his eyesight for decades after he was told he would be blind in a matter of months. The program that supplied Randall still supplies two other glaucoma patients grandfathered into the program, which was closed to new participants under the first Bush administration in 1992. With state Rep. Gregg Underheim, R-Oshkosh, who chairs the state Assembly's Health Committee, ready to introduce a medical marijuana bill in the state Legislature, there is new hope for Wisconsin glaucoma patients who have exhausted all legal remedies and may want to use marijuana to save their eyesight. It is immoral to make patients who can benefit from medicinal pot choose between breaking the law or suffering needlessly, whether suffering from glaucoma, cancer, HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis, chronic pain, rare diseases like Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome or numerous other medical conditions. Polling has shown that both within our state and nationally more than 80 percent of people support giving patients safe and legal access to medical marijuana. This silent majority must now speak up and let state lawmakers know that there is a pressing need to pass a medical marijuana bill without delay. Please make your voice be heard. Gary Storck, Director of communications Is My Medicine Legal YET? www.immly.org - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake