| 11th
SEPTEMBER 2003 |
Dutch
to prescribe cannabis for pain |
|
Dutch
to prescribe cannabis
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By Geraldine Coughlan
BBC correspondent in The Hague
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3196849.stm
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From Monday, Dutch doctors will be able to prescribe medicinal cannabis
to patients.
Several countries are researching the use of medical cannabis Soft-drug
use is tolerated in the Netherlands, but for the past two years the
government's Bureau for Medicinal Cannabis (BMC) has been
researching the effect of the drug on patients.
Other countries, including the UK, are also considering allowing the
sale of the drug in pharmacies.
Medicinal cannabis is intended as a pain reliever for cancer and Aids
patients, and for people suffering from other illnesses, such as multiple
sclerosis. In line with United Nations narcotics regulations, the BMC
is monitoring the cultivation and distribution of the drug.
*Five-gram packets
The BMC has signed a contract with two marijuana growers to supply
pharmacies. The drug will be sold in five-gram packets for around $50.
Public-health insurers are to decide this week whether they will cover
the costs.
The use of soft drugs is illegal but tolerated in the Netherlands,
and cannabis is openly sold in so-called coffee shops. In March this
year, the government changed the opium law to allow doctors to prescribe
the drug through pharmacists. The Netherlands is co-operating with
other countries who are researching the use of medicinal cannabis,
including Canada, the United States, Britain, Switzerland and Belgium.
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| Several countries are researching the use
of medical cannabis
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