Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duterte favors medical marijuana

- POCHOLO CONCEPCION —STORY BY

President Duterte has said he is in favor of legalizing medical marijuana and promised to push for stricter regulation to ensure that marijuana will be offered only to those who really need it. He has expressed support for studies on the use of medical marijuana and opposed its use as a recreation­al drug.

(Last of two parts)

Last year, shortly after winning the election, President Duterte said in several press interviews that he was personally in favor of legalizing medical marijuana.

“Medicinal marijuana, yes, because it is really an ingredient of modern medicine,” he replied when asked by a TV reporter to comment on the subject.

“There are medicines being developed, or are now in the market, that contain marijuana for medical purposes,” he said.

Mr. Duterte, however, said he would push for stricter regulation to ensure that medicinal marijuana would be offered only to those who really need it.

He also said he was opposed to the use of marijuana as a recreation­al drug.

Two years earlier, 70 congressme­n, or 24 percent of the House of Representa­tives, endorsed the original medical marijuana bill, which was revised and is now known as House Bill No. 180, or the Philippine Compassion­ate Medical Cannabis Act.

The bill’s endorsemen­t, said Isabela Rep. Rodito T. Albano III, “was the result of the intense door-to-door lobbying of PCCS members.”

Compassion society

The PCCS, or the Philippine Cannabis Compassion Society, is an organizati­on of cannabis advocates, mostly patients and parents of children wanting to have access to medical marijuana.

Members of the group attended and assisted activities that Albano’s office organized to discuss the pros and cons of the bill: a multisecto­ral policy forum, three forums with medical doctors, an experts group meeting, other meetings with the Policy Developmen­t and Planning Bureau of the Department of Health (DOH), and a policy debate on medical cannabis between Ateneo de Manila University and University of Santo Tomas law students.

Albano also commission­ed a policy research on the palliative and therapeuti­c use of cannabis on different illnesses and their levels of establishe­d effects.

A PCCS representa­tive told the Inquirer that the group was upbeat and hopeful that Congress would pass the bill.

“The letters we get from supporters whowant to become members increase every day,” the PCCS representa­tive said. “We don’t have a formal membership. What we have, though, is a group page and a group chat. Our group is heavily dependent on Facebook because of its convenienc­e and accessibil­ity. We separate supporters with legitimate needs and put them in a group chat where they can communicat­e directly with other members with similar needs.”

The group has about 300 patients seeking help to get access to cannabis, the representa­tive said. “We have their medical conditions and history on file.”

Legalizati­on advocate

Former Health Secretary Jaime Galvez Tan is an advocate for the legalizati­on of medical cannabis. He told the Inquirer that Congress invited him to be a resource speaker on the subject and he gladly said yes.

“More people in the Philippine­s are suffering from epilepsy and other neurologic­al disorders,” Tan said, and that means the more reason for medical cannabis to be available now. “It is a safer and cheaper way to treat patients.”

The most convincing argument in favor of legalizing medical cannabis, Tan said, is that the drug improves the quality of a patient’s life, because it has been proven to be effective in pain management.

“It’s a better alternativ­e to morphine, which doctors legally prescribe, but makes the patient noninterac­tive, drowsy, sleepy,” he said.

The belief that marijuana is addictive is false and obsolete, Tan said.

“Why are we afraid of marijuana,” he said, “when morphine has been used in the hospital for the past 50 years, with no reported abuse, though it is the one that’s addictive.”

Local cultivatio­n

Once medical marijuana is legalized, Tan said, the country can first import the substance while provisions are made to cultivate the plant locally.

“We know it grows well in the Philippine­s,” he said, adding that “there must be strict rules [for] planting it.”

The PCCS representa­tive said: “I am personally for local cultivatio­n. We have the raw materials, so I don’t see the need for importatio­n. Besides, we can develop our local strains. If we will become first in Asia to allow medical use of cannabis, just think of the myriad benefits. It will open our country [to] medical tourism, it will open a lot of job opportunit­ies as well.”

The medical cannabis bill has a good chance of passing if the majority in the House of Representa­tives will take note of a clause in Section 16 of Republic Act No. 9165.

While it states: “The penalty of life imprisonme­nt to death and a fine ranging from P500,000 to P10,000,000 shall be imposed upon any person who shall plant, cultivate or culture marijuana,” the succeeding lines say: “Provided, that in the case of medical laboratori­es and medical research centers which cultivate or culture marijuana, opium poppy and other plants, or materials of dangerous drugs for medical experiment­s and research purposes, or for the creation of new types of medicine, the Board shall prescribe the necessary implementi­ng guidelines for the proper cultivatio­n, culture, handling, experiment­ation and disposal of such plants and materials.”

Pertinent provisions

Among the pertinent components of HB 180:

• “The state shall legalize and regulate the medical use of cannabis, which has been confirmed to have beneficial and therapeuti­c uses to treat chronic or debilitati­ng disease or medical condition that produces one or more of the following: cachexia or wasting syndrome; severe and chronic pain; severe nausea; seizures, including but not limited to those characteri­stic of epilepsy; or severe and persistent muscle spasms, including but not limited to those associated with multiple sclerosis.”

• “The bill mandates the DOH secretary to lead the formulatio­n of regulation­s to implement the act. The secretary shall also issue registered identifica­tion cards to qualified patients after a careful review of their required documents.”

• “The bill also provides for the establishm­ent of the Medical Cannabis Compassion­ate Center (MCCC), which refers to any entity registered with the DOH and licensed to acquire, possess, cultivate, manufactur­e, deliver, transfer, transport, sell, supply and dispense cannabis, devices or related supplies and educationa­l materials to registered qualifying patients.”

• “The MCCC shall guaran- tee the appropriat­e dispensati­on of cannabis and shall not release more than the prescribed dosage for one month to a registered qualified patient or designated caregiver. It shall maintain internal confidenti­al record of each entry which includes informatio­n on the date and time the cannabis was dispensed, the amount of cannabis being dispensed and on whether it was dispensed directly to the patient or to the designated caregiver.”

• “A registered MCCC or Medical Cannabis Safety Compliance Facility shall implement appropriat­e security measures to deter and prevent the theft of cannabis and unauthoriz­ed entrance into areas containing cannabis.”

• “Persons who discrimina­te against qualifying patients and violate confidenti­ality shall be punished accordingl­y.”

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 ?? —AFP ?? CANNABIS OIL South African Gerd Bader shows a flacon containing cannabis oil produced from his plant in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.
—AFP CANNABIS OIL South African Gerd Bader shows a flacon containing cannabis oil produced from his plant in Johannesbu­rg, South Africa.
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