Penticton Herald

Smoking pot as a medicine raises questions for doctors

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VANCOUVER — Not all medicinal marijuana is created equal. That’s what some experts are saying as they warn about the health risks and curtailed effectiven­ess associated with smoking medicine.

As medical pot becomes increasing­ly mainstream and Canada moves toward legalizing the substance, health experts are emphasizin­g the need for doctors and patients to consider the sometimes serious side-effects linked to the various ways of consuming the drug.

Paul Farnan, an addictions specialist at the University of British Columbia, likened a recommenda­tion to smoke medicinal marijuana to a doctor handing out a prescripti­on to light up an opium pipe.

“We know there’s something in opium that helps pain, and we’re able to pharmaceut­ically develop morphine and other analgesics, but we wouldn’t say to people, ‘You have pain? Why don’t you smoke opium?’” he said.

“We’re kind of saying to people, ‘We think there’s some stuff that cannabinoi­ds will be helpful for. Why don’t you just smoke cannabis?’ First of all, cannabis is actually a really dangerous thing for your lungs.”

Mikhail Kogan, medical director of the Center for Integrativ­e Medicine at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., said he sees no reason for people to smoke marijuana medically anymore.

It’s difficult to absorb enough of the drug through the lungs, and gastric acids interfere when someone eats it, he said, adding that it’s more effective to take the drug by other means, such as under the tongue.

“Rectally is actually a lot more preferred because of the volume of absorption. You can put a lot more and it gets absorbed a lot better, but not everybody is open to this way of administra­tion,” Kogan said.

“We have so many other products now, so many modes of delivery, that smoking in my opinion is very archaic and has very little clinical applicabil­ity,” he added.

“Having said that, I think that probably the majority of people still smoke because it’s the most available method.”

Health Canada officially recommends against smoking marijuana.

“Many of the chemicals found in tobacco smoke are also found in cannabis smoke,” reads its website.

The Canadian Medical Associatio­n has no formal position on the consumptio­n of medicinal pot, but it officially opposes the inhalation of any burned plant material.

Associatio­n spokesman Jeff Blackmer added that many physicians are reluctant to prescribe medical marijuana because of the absence of peer-reviewed research into whether the drug is medically effective, its possible side-effects, appropriat­e dosage and more.

A “strong majority” of doctors would prefer not to be involved as so-called gatekeeper­s, Blackmer added. “Most of them hate it,” he said. “This is something that was imposed on us by the government, and the majority of physicians do not want to have anything to do with it.”

Debra Lynkowski, head of the Canadian Lung Associatio­n, urged patients and doctors to take lung health into considerat­ion when discussing medicinal marijuana.

“When you burn something, that combustion releases toxins and carcinogen­s, and they’re released regardless of what the source is,” she said.

“Our primary concern with regard to that is just to be considerin­g any kind of lung health implicatio­ns.”

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