Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Medical cannabis set to be allowed

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DOCTORS will be able legally prescribe medicinal cannabis to patients in the UK, the Home Office has said.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid has decided to relax the rules about the circumstan­ces in which the products can be given to patients, after considerin­g expert advice from a specially commission­ed review.

It follows several high-profile cases, including that of young epilepsy sufferers Alfie Dingley and Billy Caldwell, whose conditions appeared to be helped by cannabis oil.

Home Secretary Sajid Javid said: “Recent cases involving sick children made it clear to me that our position on cannabis-related medicinal products was not satisfacto­ry.

“That is why we launched a review and set up an expert panel to advise on licence applicatio­ns in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

“Following advice from two sets of independen­t advisers, I have taken the decision to reschedule cannabis-derived medicinal products – meaning they will be available on prescripti­on. This will help patients with an exceptiona­l clinical need, but is in no way a first step to the legalisati­on of cannabis for recreation­al use.”

An initial review by Dame Sally Davies, chief medical adviser, concluded that there is evidence medicinal cannabis has therapeuti­c benefits.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which carried out the second part of the review, last week said doctors should be able to prescribe medicinal cannabis provided products meet safety standards.

It recommende­d cannabis-derived medicinal products should be placed in Schedule 2 of the Misuse of Drugs Regulation­s 2001.

Cannabis has previously been classed as a Schedule 1 drug, meaning it is thought to have no therapeuti­c value but can be used for research with a Home Office licence.

The Department for Health and Social Care and Medicines and Health Products Regulatory Agency will develop a definition of what constitute­s a cannabis-derived medicinal product, the Home Office said.

Only products meeting this definition will be reschedule­d and other forms of cannabis will remain under current laws.

Legal prescribin­g of reschedule­d products will begin by the autumn.

Sir Mike Penning, co-chairman of the recently establishe­d cross-party parliament­ary group on Medical Cannabis Under Prescripti­on, said: “I have just spoken to the Home Secretary to say how pleased I am that he has acted so quickly and I pay testament to the families and campaigner­s that have fought so hard to achieve this dramatic change in policy.”

Before the changes are brought in, clinicians can still apply to the independen­t expert panel on behalf of patients who want access to medicinal cannabis products.

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