Author Topic: Florida legislature joins southern push for marijuana reform  (Read 1318 times)

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Offline Buster's Uncle

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Florida legislature joins southern push for marijuana reform
« on: March 06, 2014, 02:15:13 AM »
Florida legislature joins southern push for marijuana reform
Reuters
By Bill Cotterell  4 hours ago



Florida state representative Katie Edwards (D), speaks to the House Criminal Justice Committee in support of a bill to legalize the use of a "non-euphoric" marijuana oil extract for patients with epileptic seizures in Tallahassee, Florida, March 5, 2014. REUTERS/Bill Cotterell



TALLAHASSEE, Florida (Reuters) - Acknowledging a major shift in societal attitudes toward marijuana, a key committee of the Florida legislature voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday to approve medical use of a "non-euphoric" marijuana extract that has shown promising results in treating seizures.

"We have evidence of benefits," Republican state Representative Cary Pigman, an emergency room physician, said of the substance known as cannabidiol, or CBD. "We have no evidence of harm."

The Florida House Criminal Justice Committee voted 11-1 in favor of approving a proposal to allow medical use of CBD. Before the vote, Pigman referred to parents in the audience who had told of their children having epileptic seizures that steadily destroyed brain cells.

"Each of these children is moving closer to their deaths, at a lightning-fast rate, compared to the rest of us," he said.

The bill is not related to a constitutional amendment put on next November's Florida ballot by a public petition campaign that would allow doctors to prescribe regular marijuana for patients with severe disabilities.

The pending proposal (HB 843) allows tightly controlled use of a specially cultivated strain high in CBD and low in tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the psychoactive compound that gets smokers high.

The Georgia House recently voted 171-4 for a similar bill and another CBD proposal is pending in Alabama. The Florida bill has heavyweight sponsorship by criminal justice committee chairman Matt Gaetz, a conservative opponent of the medical marijuana ballot, and Representative Katie Edwards, a Democrat from a liberal Fort Lauderdale district who supports medical prescription of the herb.

"We've been fooled into thinking this is something unsafe for so many years and that's stifled good research," Edwards said after the committee meeting.

Gaetz emphasized that under his and Edwards' bill, there would be significant safeguards against mixing medical and recreational pot. The drug could not be in smoking form, a user must not be in possession of any illegal drug, use of the drug would have to be approved by a physician, and the drug itself would have to be sufficiently low in THC and high in CBD.

Gaetz also said the bill provides a start-up $1 million in "research bait" for pharmaceutical companies to come to Florida and refine the substance.

"You have a plant I understand has a negative stigma to it because of the side effects of recreational use, but the fact is it has medical value," said Representative Dane Eagle, a Republican who said he had opposed marijuana legalization until now.

The bill next goes to the House Appropriations Committee and the full Judiciary Committee. A companion Senate bill (SB 1030) has not yet been heard in that chamber.

Holley Moseley, cofounder of Caring 4 Florida and mother of an 11-year-old girl with epilepsy, thanked the committee for advancing the legislation, which she said would "mean a better life for our daughter and our family."


http://news.yahoo.com/florida-legislature-joins-southern-push-marijuana-reform-210802711--finance.html

...

Thoughts?  Anyone care to cop to being a pothead?


I don't even drink, but I think outlawing the maryhotchie and allowing th' booze is irrational.  I've been around enough people on one or the other to know which one naturally causes more trouble.

Offline Rusty Edge

Re: Florida legislature joins southern push for marijuana reform
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2014, 03:48:59 AM »
I'm a drinker, well not very much of one. I'll skip that tangent at this time.

There's been a lot of cancer in my family. It's hard for me to express myself without bad words on this subject.  :mad:

Put it this way- The politicians should have more compassion for chemo patients, and let the doctors decide what's good for them, including marijuana and it's derivatives. ( it's usually the same politicians ridiculing gov healthcare that decide this drug can't be used or even researched.) There should be research and production rather than demonization.

The same goes for seizures, glaucoma and AIDS.  :mad:

Offline Buster's Uncle

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Re: Florida legislature joins southern push for marijuana reform
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2014, 04:00:25 AM »
Agreed.

Good news on the AIDS front today, you know.  Check the science forum. http://alphacentauri2.info/index.php?topic=7533.0 and http://alphacentauri2.info/index.php?topic=7534.0

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Good Trip? LSD May Ease Anxiety
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2014, 06:18:31 PM »
Good Trip? LSD May Ease Anxiety
LiveScience.com
By Marc Lallanilla, Assistant Editor  4 hours ago



Illustration of a human brain.



Lysergic acid diethylamide, better known as LSD or acid, has a checkered past — or, perhaps, a roiling and vibrantly colored past.

Since the drug was synthesized by chemist Albert Hoffman in 1938, acid has been used by an unlikely range of people, from counterculture guru Timothy Leary to undercover CIA spies conducting experiments on unsuspecting patrons of bars and restaurants.

Though U.S. research on LSD was banned in 1966, researchers in Europe are now reassessing its potential benefits. Doctors in Switzerland recently completed an LSD experiment examining the drug's effect on patients with anxiety. "In short, everything was groovy," the Los Angeles Times reported.


No 'bad trips'

The researchers conducted their LSD experiment with 12 volunteers who were living with a life-threatening illness. (Most of them had terminal cancer.) They also scored high on tests measuring anxiety, and six were diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD).

Eight of the volunteers were given a 200-microgram dose of LSD, and four were given an "active placebo" dose of 20 micrograms (which would produce some side effect to convince participants they were getting LSD), during two separate psychotherapy sessions. Each individual was monitored in a safe, quiet room in a doctor's office furnished with a comfortable chair, a mattress, music, a bathroom and other amenities.

"I told them that each session would be right here, in a safe environment, and I am part of it,'" Dr. Peter Gasser, lead researcher, told The New York Times. "I said, 'I can't guarantee you won't have intense distress, but I can tell you that if you do, it will pass.'"

None of the patients experienced any severe adverse effects or a "bad trip," said the researchers, whose work is published in the online version of The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. Though there was some discomfort, including weeping and emotionally troubling insights, Gasser was available throughout the experiment for guidance and counseling.

"I had what you would call a mystical experience, I guess, lasting for some time, and the major part was pure distress at all these memories I had successfully forgotten for decades," one participant told the Times. "These painful feelings, regrets, this fear of death. I remember feeling very cold for a long time. I was shivering, even though I was sweating. It was a mental coldness, I think, a memory of neglect."

At a two-month follow-up, the researchers found significant reductions in anxiety in the LSD group compared with the placebo group, reductions that seemed to remain at a 12-month follow-up.


Another look at drug therapy

The LSD experiment is part of a growing trend toward taking certain drugs — long dismissed as "recreational" — more seriously for their therapeutic value. Despite a plethora of federal and state prohibitions against drug-related testing and research, investigators are discovering that many so-called party drugs have real health benefits.

Research published in the British Journal of Psychiatry in 2012 found that volunteers taking "magic mushrooms" containing psilocybin had enhanced recall, making mushrooms a possible supplement to psychotherapy. Another 2012 study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that psilocybin slowed activity in the centers of the brain that are hyperactive in people with depression.

Ecstasy, also known as MDMA, is a synthetic compound that produces hallucinations, feelingsof emotional warmth and high levels of energy. The same psychoactive properties that make ecstasy so popular with partygoers may also make it useful in treating post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, some researchers say.

And a 2012 study from the journal Science found that ketamine may help stimulate the growth of synapses in the brain, and beneficial effects of the drug on people with chronic depression can occur within hours.

"The rapid therapeutic response of ketamine in treatment-resistant patients is the biggest breakthrough in depression research in a half century," Ronald Duman, professor of psychiatry and neurobiology at Yale University, said in a statement.


LSD study results

The LSD study is the first of its kind in more than 40 years, since the drug has been off-limits to most researchers around the world since the early 1970s.

The results showed that the eight volunteers who had taken the full 200-microgram dose of LSD reported measurably lower anxiety levels after their two sessions. The four volunteers who took the lower dose, however, reported higher levels of anxiety after their LSD trips.

Those who got the full dose of LSD also reported lower levels of anxiety up to a year after their sessions. In fact, "most of the participants stated a preference for more than two LSD sessions and a longer treatment period," the researchers wrote.

"I will say, I have been more emotional since the study ended, and I don't mean always cheerful," a volunteer told the Times. "But I think it's better to feel things strongly — better to be alive than to merely function."

Because of the study's limitations — a small group of volunteers, all of whom had life-threatening illness — the results can't begeneralized to a larger group. Nonetheless, researchers cited the urgent need for more effective treatment of anxiety, and called for further studies of LSD-assisted psychotherapy.


http://news.yahoo.com/good-trip-lsd-may-ease-anxiety-134340169.html

 

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