Medical marijuana can aid in treatment of vets

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Bob Kerrey is president of the New School in New York City, a Vietnam War veteran and a former U.S. senator from Nebraska. Jason Flom is on the board of directors of the Drug Policy Alliance, based in New York City.

(Source)  The Veterans Administration recently adopted a policy prohibiting VA physicians from recommending medical marijuana to their patients, even if marijuana is the safest and most effective medicine to treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other service-related conditions.

No doubt the policy stems, in part, from the VA’s efforts to address the serious problem of drug abuse among returning veterans. Veterans advocates and organizations like the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) certainly share this concern. Last fall, the DPA issued a report calling for immediate policy changes to improve substance abuse and mental health treatment for veterans.

Yet seen from the larger perspective of helping veterans adjust to civilian life, the VA’s stance on medical marijuana is counterproductive and harmful. The ban means that — despite their service to our country — veterans who reside in the 14 states that have legalized medical marijuana are denied the same rights as every other resident of these states.

At minimum, the VA should be actively studying whether cannabis and its unique chemical ingredients can be used to reduce post-combat trauma without contributing to drug dependency. Ample research and anecdote strongly suggest that is the case.

Patient reports and published research indicate that marijuana can be a highly effective treatment for PTSD, a condition afflicting nearly one in five veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And overwhelming scientific evidence has already proven marijuana’s safety and efficacy for treating conditions like chronic pain, which affects many combat-injured veterans.

Marijuana, moreover, carries none of the risks associated with prescription drugs used to treat PTSD, which have been implicated in the tragic overdose deaths of several current conflict veterans.

“I’ve run the gamut of different medications at the VA, and basically I was at my limit,” said decorated U.S. Army veteran Paul Culkin, a New Mexico medical marijuana patient who suffers from PTSD after serving in Iraq. “The medications were turning me into a zombie. … Medical cannabis made me a father and a husband again. It’s been a blessing.”

Disappointingly, however, it seems the VA’s policy is not just about preventing substance abuse among veterans. The VA claims the ban is primarily a response to threats from the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to prosecute VA doctors for recommending medical marijuana, or for completing forms necessary for their patients to enroll in a state medical marijuana program — even though to do so would not constitute a criminal offense. Civilian doctors recommending marijuana to their patients have not been arrested or threatened with arrest.

Veterans and advocates are now urging the VA to stand up to the DEA’s harassment of veterans and remove the apparent gag order on its doctors. Such advocates include Montel Williams. The talk-show host, a medical marijuana patient and veteran of the U.S. Marines Corps and Navy, has said: “I find it egregiously offensive that we can send our children off to die for our freedom, and then so callously turn our backs on their freedom when they return home. Research has proven the efficacy of medicinal marijuana in the treatment of PTSD. How dare we turn our backs on those who did not hesitate to put themselves in harm’s way to support and defend our constitution.”

As a result of the ban, veterans who would benefit from medical marijuana are forced — at their own expense — to obtain medical advice about it from private doctors outside the VA system.

Of course, veterans in states without medical marijuana laws fare far worse. These veterans risk arrest for using marijuana to treat their combat injuries, joining the more than 800,000 Americans arrested annually for marijuana offenses.

The DPA’s report advocates for sensible policies to prevent the arrest and incarceration of veterans. Protecting veterans who use marijuana is an obvious starting point. In fact, other NATO countries not only allow their veterans to use medical marijuana but also actually reimburse them for it. Sadly, it appears U.S. troops will not come home to as enlightened or compassionate a country.

Our veterans must not be treated like lesser citizens. They deserve to receive medical advice from their VA doctors, not the DEA. They deserve, above all, the freedom to choose the safest and most effective treatment for their conditions — whatever that treatment might be.

Culkin said it best: “It would be inconceivable to withhold weapons, equipment or training from our troops on the ground. Why are we denied access to a medication that might provide relief to us and our families when we come home?”

You may also like this article for more on PTSD and medical cannabis

Share

One thought on “Medical marijuana can aid in treatment of vets

  1. The stigma attached to marijuana causes people to hide their use. If you are going to smoke a glass pipe or bong, do it openly. Let the public know that you are among the responsible adults that have chosen to roll your own cigarette and to smoke your own glass bowl. This is historic opportunity to change the medical marijuana laws. Send a letter; send an email make a phone call. Make your voice heard with the millions calling for change. Bravo Montel, Bravo
    Sunflowerpipes.com

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.