Music to my ears..............
MPs urge Government
to legalise medical cannabis in the UK James Matthews, Sky
Correspondent
Cannabis should be available on prescription,
according to the all-party group on drug policy reform.
A seven-month study has concluded that the drug is
an effective treatment and should be made available over the counter.
Baroness Molly Meacher, co-chair of the All Party
Parliamentary Group said: "Cannabis works as a medicine for a number of
medical conditions.
"The evidence has been strong enough to
persuade a growing number of countries and US states to legalise access to
medical cannabis.
"Against this background, the UK scheduling of
cannabis as a substance that has no medical value is irrational."
Cannabis, a class C drug, is illegal in the United
Kingdom. As a medicine, it is used legally in a number of countries and US
states.
There is, however, a vocal lobby against copying
the practice in the UK.
Dr Robert Lefever, a former GP and addiction
specialist, favours access to cannabis as a treatment but acknowledges that the
drug does have downsides.
He told Sky News: "Not everybody who uses
cannabis is addicted to it, but some are, and these are the people I'm
concerned for.
"We shouldn't use cannabis as a cure-all.
Cannabis specifically damages mood, memory and motivation, and that's not
helpful.
"If the Government is going to legalise
medicinal use, it needs to be aware of people who would take it, if they
possibly could, for any reason."
Jay Denton, from Colchester, suffers from multiple
sclerosis and uses cannabis to alleviate her symptoms.
The 47-year-old has to ask her care assistant to go
and buy cannabis from a dealer when her supplies need topping up.
She told Sky News that the drug should be available
over, not under the counter.
Ms Denton added: "Out of all of the therapies
I've done, cannabis is the cheapest and probably costs me about £20 to £25 a
month.
"Being able to take away the criminality in
medical cannabis will mean that I don't have to be concerned about sharing my
experiences with other people.
"I'm a law-abiding person, I don't like
breaking the law. If it wasn't helping so much, I wouldn't be touching it.
"It's vital that we get to a situation where
we catch up with a lot of countries around the world that are saying 'we can
see the benefits of this'."
Ms Denton said allowing the sale of medicinal
cannabis in a regulated manner will help some people to live, rather than just
exist.
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