cannabisnews.com: The Letter to General McCaffrey! 





The Letter to General McCaffrey! 
Posted by FoM on February 16, 1999 at 16:20:25 PT

 Dear General McCaffrey;As advocates and care givers for people living with HIV disease and AIDS, we are writing to urge you to help break the bureaucratic logjam that is keeping a potentially life-saving medicine virtually inaccessible to thousands of people living with AIDS and other debilitating illnesses. 
That medicine is marijuana. Marijuana's therapeutic uses are well documented in scientific literature. Recent scientific studies have confirmed what has been reported to us by hundreds of people living with HIV -- that marijuana can be safely used to reduce nausea and vomiting, stimulate appetite, and promote weight gain. Marijuana is widely recognized by physicians specializing in AIDS care as an important component of treatment for some patients who suffer from symptoms of advanced-stage HIV disease and the multiple-drug therapies used to manage HIV. Today, thanks to one federally approved clinical study of marijuana for people living with AIDS, sixty-four patients receive marijuana legally from supplies grown by the federal government. However, thousands of Americans, many of them people living with HIV, use marijuana as a medicine illegally, putting themselves at risk of arrest and prosecution. Because the practice is illegal, most patients use marijuana without medical supervision. Marijuana's illegality means that patients cannot be sure of obtaining standardized products that are free of contaminants. People should not have to risk their health or jail to receive needed medical care. For this reason, thirty-five state legislatures have passed laws supporting the use of marijuana as a medicine. In addition, voters in six states (Alaska, Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington) and the District of Columbia have recently approved ballot measures legalizing the medical use of marijuana within their borders -- nearly one in five Americans lives in a state whose voters have approved medical marijuana. Now, the nation is looking to the federal government to begin to show compassion and flexibility on this issue. You may be aware that the standard Food and Drug Administration approval process has been streamlined for several medications important to people living with HIV disease and AIDS. Drugs shown to fall within an acceptable standard of safety have been made available to patients before completion of all scientific trials proving effectiveness. This special procedure has helped thousands of patients to obtain life-extending benefits from new medications, and has contributed directly to building the science base for such new drugs. Our request is simple. Just as other promising AIDS medications have been made available prior to final FDA approval, so too should marijuana, when recommended by a physician, be made available to patients who choose to use it. There is not much question about the relative safety of marijuana -- it has been heavily studied around the world. These studies have revealed an important fact: there is no lethal dose of marijuana. Besides this finding, occasional marijuana smoking under controlled circumstances has not been proved to be dangerous. In sum, the known risks of marijuana are clearly within a range of acceptability sufficient to allow individual physicians and patients to monitor its use, and its results. Under these circumstances, making marijuana immediately available on a quasi-experimental basis to people living with AIDS, when their physicians request it, is a moderate step that can add to the federal government's responsiveness to the epidemic. We appeal to you, General McCaffrey, because you are in a unique position to provide leadership on this issue. Science and compassion should dictate our nation's policy regarding medical treatment. However, politics has stood in the way of the approval of marijuana as a legal medication, and the full development of a science base leading to FDA approval could still be years away. We call upon you to be a part of the political solution. We ask that you publicly encourage your colleagues in the administration to respond positively to the scientific and public support for making marijuana medically available. Sincerely, cc: Donna Shalala, Secretary of Health and Human Services Jane Henney, director, Food and Drug Administration     Sandra Thurman, director, Office of National AIDS Policy    Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS) Senate Majority Leader    Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD) Senate Minority Leader    Rep. J. Dennis Hastert (R-IL), Speaker of the House    Rep. Dick Armey (R-TX) House Majority Leader    Rep. Richard Gephardt (D-MO) House Minority Leader  SIGNATORIES  *    Daniel Zingale/Jeff Jacobs      Executive Director/Legislative Director      AIDS Action Council  *    Regina Aragon      Public Policy Director      San Francisco AIDS Foundation  *    Herb K. Schultz      Director of Government Affairs      AIDS Project Los Angeles  *    Martin Ornelas-Quintero      National Latina/o Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender      Organization      Washington, DC  *    Julian B. Rush      United Methodist Minister / Colorado AIDS Project      Denver, CO  *    Mary Margaret Bush      Executive Director      The Center for AIDS Services      Oakland, CA  *    Donna Rae Palmer      Executive Director      Mobilization Against AIDS      San Francisco, CA  *    Matt Patrick      Executive Director      Boulder County AIDS Project      Boulder, CO  *    Kenneth T. South      Executive Director      AIDS National Interfaith Network      Washington, D.C.  *    Ron Rowell      Executive Director      National Native American AIDS Prevention Center      Oakland, CA  *    Chris Norwood      Health Force: Women and Men Against AIDS      Bronx, NY  *    Dennis de Leon      Latino Commission on AIDS      New York, NY  *    David E. Munar      Director of Public Policy      AIDS Foundation of Chicago      Chicago, IL  *    Trish Moyan Torruella      Executive Director      Mothers Voices to End AIDS      New York, NY  *    Dr. Pat Hawkins      Associate Executive Director      Whitman-Walker Clinic      Washington, DC  *    Steven B. Johnson      Director of Public Policy and Communications      Northwest AIDS Foundation      Seattle, WA  *    Mark D. Garvey      Being Alive Program Specialist      AIDS Project Arizona      Phoenix AZ  *    Lupe Lopez      Executive Director      People of Color Against AIDS Network      Seattle, WA  CONTACT: Rachel Swain, Senior Publicist of Communication Works,415-255-1946.
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