Jerusalem – Doctors Prescribing Marijuana In Israel To Double

    8

    An Avidekel marijuana bud is displayed at the Tikun Olam company center in Tel Aviv on June 17. Photo by REUTERS/Nir EliasJerusalem – The number of physicians allowed to prescribe medical marijuana will be raised from nine to 20 by the end of this year, Likud MK Haim Katz, who chairs the Knesset Labor, Social Welfare and Health Committee said on Monday. In a raucous session, Katz said that a subcomittee will be formed to discuss intensively, demands by patients groups to get medical cannabis more easily to relieve their pain and other side effects of serious illness.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Cannabis is used by sufferers of chronic ailments, including cancer, multiple sclerosis and post-traumatic stress disorder, to combat pain, insomnia, lack of appetite and other symptoms.

    The Health Ministry will receive recommendations from the subcommittee, while the ministry will provide the subcomittee with and ongoing reports to ensure that “all patients who need it will get it. If there is a need, we will solve the problem through legislation. We want those who deserve it to get it, while those who are not entitled not to get it.”

    There is concern among the law enforcement authorities that less-rigorous control of medical marijuana could lead to illegal supplies flooding the general market and being obtained for non-palliative use.

    Health Minister Yael German and her director-general Prof. Ronni Gamzu said that the current 11,000 patients who get medical cannabis will continue to get it according to existing regulations and procedures, even if their illness is not included in new categories that the ministry has announced. New patients who have medical conditions not listed as eligible will have to apply as exceptional cases, and their requests will be considered.

    The ministry officials said that this was a temporary procedure until the use of medical cannabis is arranged officially.

    MKs Tamar Zandberg and Moshe Feiglin (who has a relative who needs medical marijuana) said medical specialists treating patients with difficult conditions should be able to decide whether they need cannabis. “Have you fallen on your heads. It’s important. It’s vital, and you’re taking it from patients. I don’t know if it’s lack of sensitivity or evil or other interests?” said the Likud Beytenu MK.

    MK Miki Rosenthal (Labor) identified himself as having a condition that has required him through most of his life to get narcotic drugs for pain. “Because of a small group of people who used it even through they are not eligible, we have all become suspect in the eyes of the Health Ministry. It’s terrible!”

    Zvi Hendel, chairman of the Israel Anti-Drug Authority, said he didn’t want Israel to be the first per-capital country in medical cannabis use. Many countries have made it legal, but most of these changed their minds,” he continued.

    TV personality Avri Gilad said that his father, who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease, screamed day and night and relived the arrival of the Nazi Gestapo at his home. Then I met Alzheimer’s patients who smiled. There is arrogance by the state that comes and takes from patients’ mouths the medication that helps them.”

    Meanwhile, Tel Aviv University researchers who studied mice have found that “extremely low doses of marijuana’s psychoactive component — THC or tetrahydrocannabinol — can protect the brain before and after injury. Although it is a well-known “recreational drug,” extensive scientific research has been conducted on the therapeutic properties of marijuana in the last decade.

    Prof. Yosef Sarne of TAU’s Adelson Center for the Biology of Addictive Diseases at the Sackler Faculty of Medicine said that the drug has neuroprotective qualities as well. He has found that extremely low doses of THC— protects the brain from long-term cognitive damage in the wake of injury from hypoxia (lack of oxygen), seizures, or toxic drugs. Brain damage can have consequences ranging from mild cognitive deficits to severe neurological damage.

    Previous studies focused on injecting high doses of THC within a very short time frame – about half an hour – before or after injury. Sarne’s current research, published in the journals Behavioural Brain Research and Experimental Brain Research demonstrates that even extremely low doses of THC – around 1,000 to 10,000 times less than that in a conventional marijuana cigarette – administered over a wide window of of to a week before or one to three days after injury can “jumpstart” biochemical processes that protect brain cells and preserve cognitive function over time.

    This treatment, especially in light of the long time frame for administration and the low dosage, could be applicable to many cases of brain injury and be safer over time, Sarne wrote.

    While performing experiments on the biology of cannabis, Sarne and colleagues discovered that low doses of the drug had a big impact on cell signalling, preventing cell death and promoting growth factors. This finding led to a series of experiments designed to test the neuroprotective ability of THC in response to various brain injuries.

    In the lab, the researchers injected mice with a single low dose of THC either before or after exposing them to brain trauma. A control group of mice sustained brain injury but did not receive the THC treatment. When the mice were examined three to seven weeks after initial injury, recipients of the THC treatment performed better in behavioral tests measuring learning and memory. Additionally, biochemical studies showed heightened amounts of neuroprotective chemicals in the treatment group compared to the control group.

    The use of THC can prevent long-term cognitive damage that results from brain injury, the researchers concluded. One explanation for this effect is pre- and post-conditioning, whereby the drug causes minute damage to the brain to build resistance and trigger protective measures in the face of much more severe injury. The low dosage of THC is crucial to initiating this process without causing too much initial damage, Sarne said.

    His team is now working in collaboration with Prof. Edith Hochhauser of the Rabin Medical Center to test the ability of low doses of THC to prevent damage to the heart. Preliminary results indicate that they will find the same protective phenomenon in relation to cardiac ischemia, in which the heart muscle receives insufficient blood flow, Sarne said.

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    8 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    yoyoyo
    yoyoyo
    10 years ago

    Can’t wait for NY to legalize this so called drug that everybody I know smokes it. Yingerleit that learn all day smoke weed at night, Lawyers, Doctors, Business Men, All smoke marijuana. It’s not addictive, not harmful, you can smoke weed today and not tomorrow. It’s healthier then cigarettes, healthier then alcohol, healthier then prescription pain killers. And it’s the best neutral medicine in the world.

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    10 years ago

    To #1 There are side effects!! Memory loss is one!! Start smoking and you will start forgetting. I know somebody young! He started smoking and started forgetting. If you asked him where he was in the city, he had to think twice. This is a normal person. He is now off the stuff and no longer forgets!!

    10 years ago

    Smoking Pot Today, Foraging for Food tomorrow.