Medical marijuana
is now a $1.7-billion market in the U.S. This means that sales of
medical marijuana rival the annual revenue generated by Viagra,
a $1.9-billion business.
What's more,
the medical marijuana market is expected to nearly double in the
next five years, and that's just in the 15 U.S. states where the
drug is legal. If another 20 states pass medical marijuana laws,
which projections show is possible, the market could grow to $8.9
billion by 2016.
According to
MSNBC:
"The cannabis
industry as a whole including the underground black market
and medical gray market generates anywhere from $18 billion
to $35.8 billion a year."
In the video
above, "Run From the Cure – the Rick Simpson Story," it's suggested
that pharmaceutical companies and big business may be withholding
a potential cancer cure hemp oil from the public in
the interest of personal profit.
"...perfectly
balanced 1:3 ratio of naturally-occurring omega-3 and omega-6 essential
fatty acids...unlike other seeds and nutritional oils, such as flax
and fish fish oil, hemp seeds also contain super omega-3 stearidonic
acid and super omega-6-gamma-linolenic acid in nutritionally relevant
amounts that help to reduce inflammation and improve mental functioning,
as well as make up for potentially impaired fatty acid metabolism."
They also noted
that the reason why industrial hemp cannot be grown in the United
States is because the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) refuses
to acknowledge that hemp is not the same as marijuana. As TreeHugger
reported:
"The United
States is the only industrialized nation where growing industrial
hemp is illegal. And because of that we're missing out on huge economic
opportunity...
Apparently even though Canadian cops can tell the difference between
high-THC cannabis plants (marijuana) and low-THC plants (industrial
hemp), the US DEA can't be bothered."
Cannabis, or
as it's more commonly known marijuana, has been used for its medicinal
properties for thousands of years. It's been heralded as a "cure-all,"
revered for its healing properties that not only help relieve pain
but also have been highlighted as a potential cancer cure.
Hemp Vs. Marijuana:
What's the Difference?
Before I delve
into the intriguing controversy surrounding medical marijuana, it's
important to note that the plants referred to as hemp and marijuana
are not the same. Both are members of the Cannabis sativa plant
species, but they are two distinct varieties.
Marijuana typically
is high in THC (delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol) the compound
responsible for the plant's notorious psychoactive effect
and low in CBD (cannabidiol) content. Both THC and CBD are known
as cannabinoids, which interact with your body in a unique way I'll
describe later.
What's interesting,
however, is that CBD has been shown to block the effect of THC in
the nervous system. So, marijuana plants are typically high in THC
and low in CBD, which maximizes their psychoactive effects.
Hemp, on the
other hand, is typically high in CBD and low in THC, as it is bred
to maximize its fiber, seeds and oil, the items for which it is
most commonly used. For more information on the difference between
hemp and marijuana, here is a comprehensive
article on the topic from the North American Industrial Hemp
Council (NAIHC).
Why is it
"Illegal" to Grow Hemp in the United States?
Ironically,
despite their differences, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)
classifies all C. sativa varieties as "marijuana," according to
NAIHC.
This is why
the United States is the only industrialized nation where growing
industrial hemp is illegal. Well, technically it is not illegal,
but growing it requires a permit from the DEA – and it is reportedly
almost impossible to get one.
This is a shame
for a variety of reasons, including:
Hemp
is healthy: Hemp seeds pack a powerful nutritional punch.
Two tablespoons of shelled hemp seeds contain about 11 grams of
protein and 2 grams of unsaturated omega-3 fatty acids. And, as
TreeHugger
reported, hemp seeds have a " "perfectly balanced 1:3 ratio
of naturally-occurring omega-3 and omega-6 essential fatty acids...unlike
other seeds and nutritional oils, such as flax..."
Hemp
is good for the economy: The total retail value of North
American hemp products was valued at around $400 million in 2009,
but U.S. farmers are unable to benefit from this since hemp products
are imported.
Perhaps soon
hemp will become a U.S. product, however, as Ron Paul has once again
submitted an official Congressional Record statement calling for
the legalization of industrial hemp. You can find out more about
the issues surrounding the legalization of hemp at Vote
Hemp, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the acceptance of
and free market for industrial hemp.
No matter what
you call it, cannabis and its range of varieties, including marijuana,
is said to be among the safest medicinal substances known, and there
are nearly 25 million Americans who have health conditions that
medical marijuana could reportedly treat (and this figure only includes
those living in states where its use is currently legal), according
to The State of the
Medical Marijuana Markets 2011 yet fewer than 800,000
are taking part.
If marijuana
is, in fact, capable of helping heal millions with very few, to
no, side effects, why is this not being shouted from the rooftops?
Political
Agendas and Red Tape Make Medical Marijuana a Nightmare
Marijuana was
a popular botanical medicine in the 19th and 20th centuries, common
in U.S. pharmacies of the time. Yet, in 1970, the herb was declared
a Schedule 1 controlled substance, labeling it a drug with a "high
potential for abuse" and "no accepted medical use."
Three years
later the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) was formed to enforce the
newly created drug schedules, and the fight against marijuana use
began.
The battle
that has raged since is a long one, and you can read a brief
history of marijuana prohibition in the Huffington Post
but suffice to say that movements to legalize marijuana have persisted
ever since. The most successful to date, and the one that is set
to produce the first legal marijuana market in decades, is the medical
marijuana movement.
As the State
of the Medical Marijuana Markets' executive summary states:
"Since
1996, marijuana proponents have pushed for individual states to
recognize marijuana as a treatment for a range of illnesses. New
medical research and changing public opinion have propelled these
efforts.
Over the
past 15 years, led by California, 15 states plus the District of
Columbia have adopted laws permitting some form of marijuana consumption
or distribution for medical use. These laws have been adopted by
public referendums as well as legislation."
Despite its
legal status, it was common for the DEA to raid medical marijuana
suppliers and even arrest patients, up until 2009 when the U.S.
Justice Department essentially told federal prosecutors to lay off
Americans producing and using medical marijuana in accordance with
state laws.
Now in 2011,
the report notes that a national market for medical marijuana is
worth $1.7 billion and could grow to nearly $9 billion in
the next five years. Investors are sitting on the sidelines, just
waiting for the regulatory smoke to clear.
Many patients,
too, are eager to get their hands on what some are calling the "cancer
answer."
Are You Being
Kept in the Dark About a Potential Cancer Cure?
If you ask
Canadian Rick Simpson, absolutely.
Simpson is
the man in the video above who was openly growing hemp in his backyard
and using it to produce hemp oil, which he gave, for free, to his
friends and family. The oil, Simpson and many others claim, has
a remarkable healing effect on countless diseases and conditions,
including cancer.
After numerous
raids by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Simpson was forced to
seek asylum in another country, but his Web site, Phoenix
Tears, still stands. There you can find instructions
on how to produce hemp oil, as well as testimonials
from people who say the oil has helped them. Mail
Online also featured a story of 2-year-old Cash Hyde who was
diagnosed with a serious brain tumor. His father secretly administered
cannabis oil through his son's feeding tube while he was in the
hospital in failing health and the boy experienced a complete turnaround.
He has now been declared cancer free.
"I have
been providing people with instructions on how to make Hemp Oil
medicines for about 8 years. The results have been nothing short
of amazing. Throughout man's history hemp has always been known
as the most medicinal plant in the world. Even with this knowledge
hemp has always been used as a political and religious football.
The current
restrictions against hemp were put in place and maintained, not
because hemp is evil or harmful, but for big money to make more
big money, while we suffer and die needlessly.
Look at
a proposal such as this; if we were allowed to grow hemp in our
back yards and cure our own illnesses, what do you think the reaction
of the pharmaceutical industry would be to such a plan?
Many large
pharmaceutical companies that still exist today sold hemp based
medicines in the 1800's and early 1900's. They knew then what I
have recently found out. Hemp oil if produced properly is a cure-all
that the pharmaceutical industry can't patent."
National Cancer
Institute Changes Web Site about Cannabis' "Anti-Tumor Effect"
"The potential
benefits of medicinal Cannabis for people living with cancer include
antiemetic effects, appetite stimulation, pain relief, and improved
sleep. In the practice of integrative oncology, the health care
provider may recommend medicinal Cannabis not only for symptom management
but also for its possible direct antitumor effect."
Being the first
federal agency to publicly claim that marijuana may in fact be beneficial
and possess anti-tumor properties it generated significant
buzz on the Web. But soon after, NCI quickly changed its tune, editing
the anti-tumor reference entirely out of its statement, which
now reads:
"The potential
benefits of medicinal Cannabis for people living with cancer include
antiemetic effects, appetite stimulation, pain relief, and improved
sleep. Though no relevant surveys of practice patterns exist, it
appears that physicians caring for cancer patients who prescribe
medicinal Cannabis predominantly do so for symptom management."
"In light of
the attention garnered by the PDQ summary statement on Cannabis
and cannabinoids, reviewers for the summary on the PDQ Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Editorial Board reexamined the recently
posted statement and decided to change the wording, in order to
clarify the meaning that the Board originally intended to convey
and to correct several possible misinterpretations."
It's a suspicious
swap of wording, to say the least, but even more perplexing is why,
if anti-tumor effects have been discovered from cannabis
and
they have why is this substance not the subject of major
research studies?
Why are Medical
Marijuana and Hemp Oil NOT Being Studied?
Even a quick
review of the data suggests that cannabis deserves more than
a passing glance as a potential treatment for various diseases.
But in the United States, these studies are not being done.
"In the
past three decades, there has been an explosion of international
studies designed to investigate the therapeutic value of cannabis
(marijuana).
However,
drastic restrictions on research in the U.S. have meant that few
clinical trials are being conducted domestically and none are being
conducted as part of a sponsor-funded drug development plan aimed
at obtaining Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the
prescription use of the botanical plant itself.
Meanwhile,
research teams in Great Britain, Spain, Italy, Israel, and elsewhere
have confirmed through case studies, basic research, pre-clinical,
and preliminary clinical investigations the medical value
of cannabis ... "
It is easy
to see why drug companies would want no part in funding research
studies on a plant that can't be patented. If they were
to discover that it could cure cancer, patients would be able to
grow it themselves right in their own backyard ... this is not something
the pharmaceutical companies would want you to know about.
Simpson, who
keep in mind has been giving away hemp oil for free, is
so convinced of its usefulness that he states
on his Web site:
"When the
hemp plant is grown for medicinal use, you now have your own medical
system that is much safer and effective than anything our current
medical system provides. You still may require a doctor to set your
broken leg, but you will no longer need the chemicals they have
been pushing upon us. Hemp is medicine for the masses and no one
has the right to control its use."
Of course,
in the United States its use is controlled and even those who have
a legitimate medical need can have a hard time getting a steady
supply. This may change if more research continues to bear out marijuana's
healing properties, but for now even the ability to research the
substance is tightly controlled. As the Safe
Access report states:
" ... the
federal monopoly on the supply of cannabis has fundamentally limited
FDA-approved clinical research to investigate its safety and efficacy
in controlling symptoms of serious and chronic illnesses.
In the
United States, research is stalled, and in some cases blocked, by
a complicated federal approval process, restricted access to research-grade
cannabis, and the refusal of the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) to license private production of cannabis for use exclusively
in federally approved research."
This certainly
does make the fervent war to keep marijuana out of the hands of
Americans take on new meaning ...
How Cannabis
Works: Cannabinoids and the Cannabinoid Receptor System
There are more
than 60 chemical compounds known as cannabinoids in the marijuana
plant. A report by Dr. Manuel Guzman suggests that these active
components of cannabis and their derivatives are potential anti-cancer
agents. He wrote in the journal Nature
Reviews:
" ... these
compounds [cannabinoids] have been shown to inhibit the growth of
tumour cells in culture and animal models by modulating key cell-signaling
pathways. Cannabinoids are usually well tolerated, and do not produce
the generalized toxic effects of conventional chemotherapies."
Cannabinoids
interact with your body by way of naturally occurring cannabinoid
receptors embedded in cell membranes throughout your body. There
are cannabinoid receptors in your brain, lungs, liver, kidneys,
immune system and more; the therapeutic (and psychoactive) properties
of marijuana occur when a cannabinoid (such as the THC produced
by the cannabis plant) activates a cannabinoid receptor.
Your body also
has naturally occurring endocannabinoids similar to THC that stimulate
your cannabinoid receptors and produce a variety of important physiologic
processes.
So your body
is actually hard-wired to respond to cannabinoids through this unique
cannabinoid receptor system; research is ongoing on just how far
its impact on your health reaches, but to date it's known that cannabinoid
receptors play
an important role in many body processes, including metabolic
regulation, cravings, pain, anxiety, bone growth, and immune function.
"Marijuana
has been smoked for its medicinal properties for centuries. It was
in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia until 1942 when it was removed because
federal legislation made the drug illegal ... Still, the overwhelming
number of anecdotal reports on the therapeutic properties of marijuana
sparks interest from scientists, health care providers, and patients.
Over the
past 20 years, researchers have discovered cannabinoid receptors:
CB1, which mediates the central nervous system (CNS), and CB2, which
occurs outside the CNS and is believed to have anti-inflammatory
and immunosuppressive activity.
These scientific
developments have revealed much information supporting expansion
of research into the potential therapeutic properties of marijuana
and its cannabinoids."
ACP states
that research to date suggests these substances may be useful for:
What Does
the Research Say About Medical Marijuana?
The studies
that have been conducted so far show some promise for the use of
cannabis in the treatment of a wide range of health conditions,
including potentially cancer. For instance, in 2009 a study in the
journal Cancer
Prevention Research found that marijuana smokers have a lower
risk of head and neck cancers than non-marijuana smokers.
Harvard researchers
also found that THC
in marijuana cuts tumor growth in lung cancer while significantly
reducing its ability to spread.
There is also
a wealth of research linking marijuana with pain relief and improved
sleep. In one recent study, just three puffs of marijuana a day
for five days helped those with chronic nerve pain to relieve
pain and sleep better.
There are certainly
some downsides to marijuana use that need to be addressed, particularly
if you are thinking of smoking it for recreational purposes.
Marijuana use
can be addicting, and no doubt families have been broken up and
jobs lost over its use. In the short-term, marijuana use can cause
trouble with your ability to think clearly and may impair short-term
memory. Marijuana also leads to motor skill impairment and affects
alertness, coordination and reaction time, which is why it should
never be used prior to driving.
There is also
some evidence that marijuana use can exacerbate
psychotic symptoms in those with schizophrenia or other psychotic
disorders.
It's also been
suggested that marijuana use can serve as a "gateway" drug that
eventually leads to the use of "harder" drugs like cocaine and heroine,
although this has
been debated. Marijuana use among children and teens can also
have dire consequences, as drug use of any kind may encourage risky
choices and irresponsible behaviors.
Practical
Considerations on Using Marijuana
While the vast
majority of marijuana use is through burning and inhalation, it
is worth noting that anytime you heat materials and inhale them
you run the risk of introducing toxic elements into your system.
This is very similar to using tobacco. Like tobacco it is best to
only use organic versions. Any pesticides that are on the material
that is burned and inhaled will dramatically increase its toxicity.
Smoking marijuana
will also produce carbon monoxide and tar as byproducts of combustion.
Additionally, smoking marijuana from a bong (or waterpipe) has been
linked
to the spread of tuberculosis.
It is possible
to avoid these risks entirely by either securing cannabis in hemp
oil form or, as many medical marijuana patients do, using a vaporizer.
The device vaporizes marijuana without any of the combustion byproducts,
allowing for a clean route of ingestion.
It is certainly
ironic that a natural substance like marijuana is illegal while
prescription drugs that are prescribed by doctors every day kill
over 100,000 Americans a year and get the government's gold
seal of approval. But you never could grow a drug like Lipitor,
Avandia, or Ritalin in your backyard the way you could marijuana
... and perhaps therein lies the problem.
If one chooses
to use marijuana, from a health perspective it would seem the safest
way to use it would be to eat it (along with some fat, as THC is
fat-soluble and will not dissolve in water). It is important to
understand though that for nearly everyone in most countries, primarily
for political reasons, using marijuana is an illegal activity that
could result in serious legal consequences.
If you are
looking for a natural form of pain relief that is not currently
illegal, you can find natural alternatives by searching this site
and also reading
my comment on this past article.