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"Twenty states and the District Columbia have passed laws creating legal access to medical marijuana for seriously ill patients, and our medical colleagues in every state bordering New York — except Pennsylvania — have the ability to recommend this effective and safe treatment for their patients.
"A growing body of scientific evidence, including gold-standard randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trials, has made clear that medical marijuana is safe and effective in controlling chronic pain, alleviating nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy, treating wasting syndrome associated with HIV/AIDS, controlling muscle spasms due to multiple sclerosis, and managing epilepsy.
"Emerging evidence also suggests that medical marijuana may help patients living with cancer, Parkinson’s, and other chronic and debilitating illnesses. Moreover, compared to other prescription medications, medical cannabis is a relatively safe, having no known lethal dose, few side effects, and few contraindications."
Statement by N.Y. Physicians for Compassionate Care
Physician Support
New York Physicians for Compassionate Care
Statement from Co-Chairs
New York Physicians for Compassionate Care represents more than 600 physicians across New York who believe that doctors should not be punished for recommending the medical use of marijuana to seriously ill patients and that seriously ill people should not be criminalized for using medical marijuana if their physicians recommend that such use may be beneficial.
Twenty states and the District Columbia have passed laws creating legal access to medical marijuana for seriously ill patients, and our medical colleagues in every state bordering New York — except Pennsylvania — have the ability to recommend this effective and safe treatment for their patients. A growing body of scientific evidence, including gold-standard randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trials, has made clear that medical marijuana is safe and effective in controlling chronic pain, alleviating nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy, treating wasting syndrome associated with HIV/AIDS, controlling muscle spasms due to multiple sclerosis, and managing epilepsy. Emerging evidence also suggests that medical marijuana may help patients living with cancer, Parkinson’s, and other chronic and debilitating illnesses. Moreover, compared to other prescription medications, medical cannabis is a relatively safe, having no known lethal dose, few side effects, and few contraindications.
As physicians, we want the ability to offer our patients every possible treatment that might improve their health, alleviate their suffering, or improve their quality of life — that includes recommending the use of medical marijuana.
The bill pending in the New York State Legislature was drafted with careful, strict controls that will insure access to patients who could truly benefit from medical marijuana, while preventing diversion and misuse. In fact, under the bill, medical marijuana would be more tightly regulated than any other medication, including more dangerous medications that are routinely prescribed.
Denying patients access to a medication that can relieve their suffering is cruel, and forcing them to break the law is simply wrong. We call upon the legislature to pass the Compassionate Care Act so we can best serve our patients.
Chair, Howard Grossman, MD
Vice-chair, Sunil Aggarwal, MD, PhD
http://www.compassionatecareny.org/physician-support/