Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jun 2003 Source: Star-Ledger (NJ) Copyright: 2003 Newark Morning Ledger Co Contact: http://www.nj.com/starledger/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424 Author: Jim Miller Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Cheryl+Miller (Cheryl Miller) ACCEPTABLE MEDICINE Dr. George DiFerdinando, the state's deputy health commissioner, decided last year that seriously ill and dying patients in New Jersey do not need marijuana as medicine. He said there were acceptable alternatives for those who would use marijuana as medicine and refused to implement New Jersey's 1981 Controlled Dangerous Substances Therapeutic Research Act, which would make legal federal marijuana available to patients in New Jersey under a doctor's care and supervision. DiFerdinando met my wife Cheryl three years ago as she lay in her reclining wheelchair. She could not move her arms or legs after 30 years of multiple sclerosis. He saw her pain. He heard her tell him that marijuana relieved her pain and spasticity. He sure didn't tell Cheryl to her face that she already had "acceptable medicine." Cheryl Miller, my wife and the light of my life, passed away June 7. I can assure you her legal prescription medicine was not acceptable. Cheryl didn't smoke marijuana. She ate it. When it was available, she had less pain. Now that was acceptable. Jim Miller, Silverton