Pubdate: Fri, 29 Apr 2011 Source: Missoulian (MT) Copyright: 2011 Missoulian Contact: http://www.missoulian.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/720 Author: Anne Ward POT IS THE NONADDICTIVE ALTERNATIVE Much has been made of the number of medical cannabis cardholders in Montana. Even people who claim to have voted in favor of Initiative 148 say they are surprised at the number of people who have obtained cards. In 2004, perhaps many Montanans who voted "yes" for I-148 thought that they were just voting for severely disabled people or people on their death beds to have access to cannabis. Medical cannabis has numerous applications in these medical instances, but it also is quite effective in the treatment of chronic illnesses. For many Montana citizens suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, spinal conditions, neuropathy, glaucoma, chronic pain, chronic nausea, etc., there is the need for long-term medication. Yes, these people can survive without it, but we're talking quality of life here. For many, the choice is to take physically addictive, habit-forming pharmaceutical narcotics on a long-term basis and just deal with becoming addicted and the long-term side effects of drug toxicity on their bodies, or to ingest or smoke medical cannabis, which is nontoxic, not physically addictive, has no lethal dose and no long-term side effects have been noted, even in heavy users. The whole point of medical cannabis is that it is a safer alternative to commonly prescribed and approved drugs for these conditions. These people suffering from chronic conditions are all ages, and most still need to work for a living, raise their children and go about the pursuit of freedom. You can't do this if you are drugged out of your mind on oxycodone or Percocet, or maybe Valium as a muscle relaxer. If you ingest or smoke a little cannabis, you can work, interact with your kids, live your life, be pleasant to be around and hopefully be legal while you're doing it. Anne Ward, Corvallis - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake