Thursday, March 24, 2016

Legalization no longer the issue

Michael McCarthy is a freelance writer, contributing this excellent op-ed in today's Vancouver Sun.

Stoner mentality: The problem with marijuana is users don’t recognize it as an addiction

Once upon a time, long ago and far away, there was a hippie philosopher guru named Baba Ram Dass. He was formerly known as Richard Alpert, and taught at Harvard University. And then he discovered LSD.
One doctor specializing in addictions says the most dangerous drug on the street today is marijuana. With legalization closer than ever, the bigger threat from marijuana is treating addicts whose brain has told them being stoned is a healthy and normal state of mind.
  Ram Dass became famous for his bestselling book Be Here Now. It was a very simple title for a very simple concept: Wherever you are, be there. Don’t walk in front of buses, for instance. If you are crossing the street, pay attention. (Then came cellphones.)

What has all this to do with Mary Jane, you wonder? Pay attention. Marijuana is in the news every day now. Not only is the federal government going to legalize possession of it, there are now campaigns by “activists” to spread the use of it. No matter the same government is threatening to arrest people for smoking cigarettes; legalization is no longer the issue. There is a bigger threat.

Full disclosure: When I was young, I smoked dope. Everyone did. Not marijuana though. I lived in Montreal, where hashish was king, and Royal Nepalese Temple Hash gives you one heck of a buzz. When I moved to Vancouver, the hippies were smoking homegrown weed, “love grass” as go the lyrics to Steppenwolf’s song The Pusher. As an athlete, I gave up weed and switched to hockey and mountain bikes, where the endorphins produce a better high and the addictions are healthier.

Today’s weed is not grown in the shed next to where you keep your old Herman’s Hermits records. The THC in the new hydroponic strains are apparently 30 times stronger than love grass, and would wound a rhinoceros if rhinos were stupid enough to smoke. I say “apparently” because I am not going to do any tests to compare. The smell alone of modern skunkweed is enough to curl your socks, if you are unlucky enough to be in the vicinity when somebody lights up a doobie. But that’s not the issue.

Recently, I attended a conference about addiction. The doctor leading the conference, a psychiatrist with a specialty in addictions listed off all the new designer drugs, some so powerful they can kill you just by looking at them. A new opioid named W-18 evidently is 100 times more powerful than fentanyl, which is so powerful it has killed thousands of Canadians. But neither drug is the most addictive.

What is the most dangerous drug on the street today? The doctor replied the answer is easy: marijuana. He treats more patients for Mary Jane than all other drugs combined. Love grass? That’s impossible! You can never overdose on weed, although you may get lung cancer if you smoke enough of it.

The problem is that weed is the only dangerous drug that doesn’t come with its own built-in consequences. Unlike alcohol, heroin, crack and all the other popular drugs, marijuana is fairly benign, physically. No overdoses, no hangovers, no immediate negative consequences. Eventually you have to stop using other substances or they will stop you. Not marijuana.

Aside from a dozy state of post bliss euphoria known as “being wasted,” the worst effects of smoking dope are sleepiness and hunger that leads straight to the brownies. Gaining weight is the biggest hassle. But wait. There’s more, of course.

Given that you can smoke dope every day without any lasting consequences, many people do just that. Aside from the fact that they are stoned (which is not the best state of mind to be in when driving, working, looking after kids or many other activities), the addiction leads to changes in the brain and personality. You become a “stoner.” You think that people who aren’t stoned are the ones who have a problem.

This line of thinking, such as it is, does have consequences. Suppose, said the doctor, that your wife wants you to stop being stoned. Suppose your employer is not happy to find your brain is often parked in Never Never Land. Often this leads to divorce, unemployment, or other unhappy consequences.

Cigarette smokers will tell you that nicotine is the most addictive drug and hardest to quit. I never smoked cigarettes, so I can’t say, but I understand that you can make a conscious decision to stop when you realize it’s hurting you, see your doctor, put patches on your arm, and go for long walks and things like that. It’s somewhat harder to reconfigure a brain that has told itself that being stoned is a healthy and normal state of mind. You can’t break an addiction if you don’t recognize it as an addiction.

Be here now? Never mind all the stoners wandering around Lalaland in a daze wondering what day of the week it is. What about all these whackos with cellphones stuck in their ears walking in front of buses? Where is Ram Dass when you really need him?

Friday, March 18, 2016

AND THE BEAT GOES ON...


The following was sent to us by a friend who is a doctor. I have removed the name and  contact information of the sender.

This is being posted so that you can see that all good people involved in the pot business will be well rewarded. Even if they call themselves doctors.

Hi,


I want to make you aware of Cannibinoid Medical Centre, referral ONLY clinic at Spring Garden Rd Professional Bldg. I thought this may be of interest. There is no Family practice component, patients are assess for their suitability or not for the use of cannabis to treat their medical issue whether it would be pain management or chronic disease management, etc.


We are seeking physicians to do at least 1 shift per week. If you have interest in learning more please advise and I send you further details outline the training modules.
Once you are established in the clinic here is the earning potential;
For an 8 hr day seeing only 25 patients.

10 new patients X $80.70 = $807.00
15 recheck X $31.46 = $471.9
25 urine x $19 = $475
Total = $1753.90 x .7 = $1,227.73 physician take hm


I look forward to your response.
Thanks
Regards;

*************************************************************************************************************************


Thursday, March 17, 2016

CANADA'S MAD DECLARATION TO THE UN

The future is here and it is scary.

Read the whole piece and then consider the one healthy and knowledgeable comment, which came from Conservative critic, Rob Nicholson, who said, "There's nothing safe about taking heroin."

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

THE SILVER BULLET PEOPLE NEVER QUIT, DO THEY?




This sad, mistaken piece of propaganda was written by a sad, mistaken ideologue who hasn't got the first clue on the subject for which he shows such passion and ignorance - always a dangerous combo.


Gerry Verrier, who is in Senior Management at Manitoba's premier Therapeutic Community, the Behavioural Health Foundation, and is on our DPNC board, sent it along.



THREE SMALL SAFE INJECTION FACILITIES PROPOSED FOR TORONTO
Walter Cavalieri
Director, Canadian Harm Reduction Network
14 March 2016
NOTE: A shorter version of this article appeared in NOW magazine, on 17 March
.

In the mid 1980s, I had the opportunity to accompany a street outreach worker in Calgary, handing out condoms to women working in the sex trades.  We struck up a conversation with a middle-aged man, a local minister known to my host, who was doing the same thing.  Alas, my inner wise-ass kid asserted itself, and I decided to challenge him - just a bit - about how he, a man of the cloth, could openly condone a sinful activity when his role should be saving these women's souls.  He told me it was more important to him to keep these women alive now, so that later he could save their souls.  Humbled and enlightened, I backed off.  He had given me my first real lesson in harm reduction, one which has guided me ever since.  Harm reduction is not just about the "now" but about the future.

This, to me, is an excellent reason for setting up three small Safe Injection Sites (SIFs) in Toronto.  With SIFs, we can save lives now, and worry about "rehabilitation" - whatever that may mean - down the road.  Working to help the living is full of possibilities, but it is impossible to help those who are dead.

Overdose deaths - at levels in Toronto which surpass even motor vehicle deaths - are an epidemic, and we are responsible for this.  All of us.  Counterproductive laws, inaccurate information, misguided leadership, institutional stigmatisation, fear ... they all play roles in keeping drug overdose deaths high in all populations - not just in "disposable" street persons.

SIFs are one important program for addressing this.  They are not a new idea.  In the mid 1990s, the Goethe Institut brought a large delegation of people from Frankfurt to share with Toronto, its sister city, Frankfurt's success in addressing its open drug scene, one of the most deadly in all Europe.  One tactic they employed was to set up sites where people could inject their drugs in a clean, well-lighted place, with sterile equipment and a knowledgeable staff to help out in emergencies.  Alas, Toronto wasn't "ready" to do anything different about its drug problems, and we have seen the results of this year in, year out.  A missed opportunity.

We cannot miss the opportunity now.  There is too much need and too much evidence that SIFs are successful.

Getting to know what actually goes on at a SIF, and why they work as well as they do, will help you appreciate the need for SIFs, and their wisdom.

Short of visiting Insite, Canada's only public SIF, or talking with Insite's staff or people who use it, take a look at any of the many videos available on the Internet, for example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xlLnhes5nqs.

Insite is a large, free-standing SIF.  Toronto's safe-use sites will resemble the SIF at the Dr. Peter Centre in Vancouver (please see photo), and will be embedded in local needle exchange programs.  Each will have only three places where people can inject.
 

As an ethnographer, I had the opportunity to observe about 30 people in Toronto injecting crack cocaine.  Remaining the "objective" observer was impossible, and I struggled to keep tears and anger at bay.  Using drugs desperately, covertly and under duress is a matter of course for people without homes or safe places to use, and shooting up in laneways, abandoned building, parks, garages, janitors' cupboards, washrooms, etc., sometimes with minimal light, does not provide safety.  No wonder there are so many illness and deaths.  That said, the people I observed wanted to be safe, and they did their best to do so and to protect the safety of their partners and friends. 

Not everyone who uses drugs is addicted, but many feel they cannot live without drugs. They use them for a variety of reasons, most quite valid. However, as long as the drugs they use have unpredictable levels of strength and purity, overdoses and damage to health are inevitable, and we - all of us - who support the so-called War on Drugs - share in the responsibility for the drug-related deaths and damage.  For 100 plus years this War has failed.  It has, in fact, made things worse for everyone.  It's time for another approach, and SIFs in Toronto offer us that opportunity.

Will SIFs increase drug use, crime, illness?  NO.  They have not done this anywhere.

What SIFs offer is a way to bring back into society people who have been pushed to the edges of it and a place where they can connect with good and dedicated healthcare workers and get a lifesaving service without judgment and stigma. 

Johan Hari, author and journalist, says that the opposite of addiction is connection.  Safe Injection Facilities prove this.

Safe injection Facilities will be discussed and voted on in the Toronto City Council this summer. If you are a Toronto resident, please contact your City Councillor to inform her or him of your support.  If you live in other parts of Canada, please urge your city officials to address the growing tragedy of accidental drug overdose deaths.  Most of these deaths are preventable.

Monday, February 22, 2016

FROM HEALTH MINISTER TO POT SALES

This is a story that is difficult to read and to publish.

The reason is that it shows how deep a rabbit hole we are are scurrying down at top speed.

The key element in the tale is that the Chair of the board of one of these hugely funded new medpot companies is the former Ontario Minister of Health, one George Smitherman.



Apparently what you learn as the Health Minister of a large Canadian province is how to market marijuana and make scads of money.

He is, of course, hardly alone.

We can boast in this outpost a former mayor/Premier and a former Police Chief and Attorney General who are now drinking the same Kool-Aid.

Kelowna firm gets license from federal government to produce medical pot products

THC BioMed Intl Ltd. is listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSNX: THC)

THC BioMed will begin research this week, CEO and president John Miller said Sunday, and plans to start growing as soon as they can import seeds from The Netherlands. After they start producing, they will need to obtain a licence to sell from Health Canada.

Photograph by: THCbiomed.com, Internet photo

A B.C. firm aiming to specialize in cannabis edibles, oils and patches is one of two medical-marijuana producers newly licensed by the federal government.

THC BioMed Ltd. in Kelowna and Green Relief Inc. of Flamborough, Ont., both received their licences to cultivate pot on Feb. 18, Health Canada’s website shows.

They’re the first two new producers to be licensed since Justin Trudeau’s government took power after last October’s election, bringing the total to 29 licensed producers across Canada, including 16 in Ontario and seven in B.C.

THC BioMed will begin research this week, CEO and president John Miller said Sunday, and plans to start growing as soon as they can import seeds from The Netherlands. After they start producing, they will need to obtain a licence to sell from Health Canada.

THC is still waiting on the result of an application for a licence to produce cannabis oils, Miller said, and the company plans to specialize in “derivatives.”

A recent news release from the firm gives examples of derivatives such as edibles, anti-inflammatorytopical agents, patches, pills and encapsulated oils. “We believe the market is going to go more toward derivatives,” Miller said.

THC BioMed chairman Jason Walsh said as soon as the company’s name was added to the Health Canada website, “the phones went nuts” with calls from “tons of investors.”

THC BioMed Intl Ltd. is listed on the Canadian Securities Exchange (CSNX: THC). Trading was temporarily halted last week pending a formal announcement, expected Monday, about the licensing, said George Smitherman, the former Ontario politician and director of THC BioMed’s board.
Smitherman, who’s also involved with two other medical-marijuana firms in Ontario, said he was first exposed to the sector during his tenure as Ontario’s minister of health, adding it’s an “exciting” time in the growth industry.

The other new licence issued last week went to Green Relief Inc., an “aquaponic” grow operation, combining aquaculture and hydroponics. The facility, outside Hamilton, Ont., includes a recirculating water system and 8,000 tilapia fish whose waste will fertilize the plants.

“It’s the most sustainable form of agriculture known to mankind today,” Warren Bravo said, adding his operation will grow faster than other methods and require less water. “It’s the coolest thing ever.”
Green Relief, a private firm, will start growing next week in their 30,000-square-foot facility, with “aggressive expansion plans” for an additional 200,000 sq. ft., Bravo said, adding: “We want to be a dominant force in the industry, and advance the science of not only cannabis, but sustainable agriculture as well.”

dfumano@theprovince.com
twitter.com/fumano

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

VIRTUAL SUPPORT FOR FAMILIES & FRIENDS OF ADDICTS





Our colleague, Candace Plattor, works specifically with friends and families of addicts. She has now added to her array of services a Virtual Support Group.

 It's a 12-week virtual support group for the loved ones of addicts with 90-minute calls taking place every other week; participants can join via phone (local numbers provided) or their computers.


In her own words...


For more than 25 years, I’ve been helping loved ones get off the roller-coaster chaos of addiction and live their best lives. 

Hi, I’m Candace Plattor, a therapist in private practice, specializing in addictive behaviours such as alcohol and drug abuse. I know what works when it comes to helping you feel relief from the inevitable turmoil caused by an addicted loved one in your life. I created this support group as a way to guide anyone who otherwise has nowhere else to turn.

Have a look and register here.http://candaceplattor.com/loving-an-addict-loving-yourself-support-group/


Friday, November 20, 2015

THE POT MYTH OF "OTHER COUNTRIES HAVE LEGALIZED AND ALL IS GOOD"

AZ Central
My Turn: Why Bernie Sanders is wrong about legal pot
Ed Gogek, AZ I See It October 22, 2015

Doctor: The Democratic presidential candidate can't have it both ways: Free health care and legal marijuana simply don't go together.
During last week’s Democratic debate, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said the United States should model its social policies on Sweden, Norway and Denmark — countries that provide free health care, free college and paid family leave.
But by saying he’d vote to legalize marijuana, Sanders made it much harder to convince Americans to adopt these programs.
Swedish history shows why.
In the 1970s, Sweden did what we’re doing now: told police to ignore drug possession and only pursue serious crime. But drug abuse soared, so the country reversed course. Today, Sweden and its neighbors have some of the world’s toughest drug laws, including tough marijuana laws.
None of the Scandinavian countries have decriminalized marijuana. Nor do they permit its medical use. An 84-acre autonomous district in Copenhagen is allowed to flout marijuana laws, but the rest of Denmark enforces them strictly.
This doesn’t mean jailing drug users. Sweden uses the threat of jail to get substance abusers into treatment, and because crime is mostly caused by substance abuse, this policy prevents crime — so well that over the past decade the country has closed four prisons.
Tough marijuana laws also help keep Swedish socialism affordable, and that’s why supporting legalization is a problem for Sanders. People already worry about what his programs would cost.
For example, a Rand Corporation report says California spends $110 million yearly on schizophrenia hospitalizations caused by marijuana; for the whole U.S., that’s over $1 billion per year. Marijuana also causes addiction and injuries from auto accidents, which are expensive problems to treat.
How can Sanders ask America to pay for free health care if he’s promoting a marijuana policy that would make health care more expensive?
Research on postal employees, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1990, found that marijuana users had more disciplinary problems, more absenteeism and higher turnover. A 2012 study showed that marijuana users have less commitment to work. One company already left Colorado, citing employees who were too stoned to be productive.
Sanders wants the U.S. to require paid family leave and a high minimum wage. But if at the same time we legalize a drug that causes poor work performance, it could bankrupt businesses.
University of Maryland study found that college students who used marijuana, even occasionally, studied less, skipped more classes, earned lower grades and were less likely to graduate. How can Sanders ask America to pay for free college, and then promote a drug policy that leads students to waste the experience?
Sanders deserves credit for promoting policies that would give American families the same financial security citizens in other rich countries enjoy. The Scandinavian programs he supports — free health care, free college, a living wage, good pensions and family leave — would greatly benefit most Americans.
However, it’s hard to take seriously someone who would also increase the cost of these programs unnecessarily. By endorsing marijuana legalization, Bernie Sanders has made himself a less convincing salesman for the ideas he cares about most.
Dr. Ed Gogek of Prescott is an addiction psychiatrist and author of "Marijuana Debunked: A handbook for parents, pundits and politicians who want to know the case against legalization."