Pubdate: Thu, 30 Nov 2017 Source: Valley Voice, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 The Valley Voice Contact: http://valleyvoice.ca/contact-us/ Website: http://www.valleyvoice.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1388 Author: Art Joyce QUESTIONS DOCTORS OF BC POSITION ON POT Reading the CBC News report, 'Associations call for ban on homegrown weed in BC once it becomes legal,' I have to question the judgment of the Doctors of BC, who default to pharmaceutical drugs quite unquestioningly, yet challenge more natural modes of treatment such as cannabis and homeopathy. Cannabis cannot be tied to a single death or overdose. Meanwhile we are experiencing an opioid crisis. The CDC noted in one report that: "Among the more than 64,000 drug overdose deaths estimated in 2016, the sharpest increase occurred among deaths related to fentanyl and fentanyl analogs (synthetic opioids) with over 20,000 overdose deaths." According to news website Vox, "More Americans died of drug overdoses in 2016 than died in the entirety of the Vietnam War - the result of the US's opioid epidemic." The Vox report highlights how drug companies convinced physicians to treat chronic pain as a serious medical issue by prescribing the pharmaceutical opioids they manufacture - a serious conflict of interest. Narcotic painkiller OxyContin was among the 15 drugs most often linked to death. Others include insulin, Vioxx, Remicade, and Paxil. Vioxx was removed from the market in 2004, yet it too was enthusiastically endorsed by the medical establishment when introduced. The fentanyl crisis is only the tip of the iceberg where the dangers of prescription drugs are concerned. Reports compiled by the FDA between 1998 and 2005 found that dangerous side effects and deaths from prescription and over--the-counter medications almost tripled to nearly 90,000 incidents. According to the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in 1998, prescription drugs kill about 106,000 Americans each year - three times as many as are killed by automobiles - making prescription drug death the! fourth leading killer after heart disease, cancer and stroke. And that's just American drug deaths. I don't deny that there are issues for families with children, but surely it's up to each parent to establish safe practices at home, not the state. And surely Doctors of BC should be looking to fulfill an educational role regarding safe cannabis use, not advocating for restrictions of civil liberties. At that point, physicians are overstepping their bounds to become health police, a role they are not equipped to fulfill. I can understand landlords wanting some controls over homegrown cannabis, especially in multiple-unit housing complexes. But one size does not fit all. To call for a province-wide ban on homegrown cannabis is first of all, excessive, and second, doomed to failure. People will simply do so illegally, as they have for decades now. Meanwhile, not one of those over 100,000 deaths can be attributed to cannabis, probably the least harmful substance in the entire pharmacopeia. So why the antipathy toward cannabis on the part of the mainstream medical establishment in BC? Our physicians need to get with the times - and the research. Art Joyce, New Denver - --- MAP posted-by: Matt