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Police raid sparks protest by medical marijuana users
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Sun, 05/16/2010 - 7:00am
By: Tony Saxon, Guelph MercuryGUELPH — Jeff Morrison doesn’t know where he’s going to get his medical marijuana anymore.
“I’ve been making calls to try and find it, but I haven’t had any luck so far,” said Morrison, one of about 100 people who attended a protest and rally in St. George’s Square Saturday in support of the Medical Cannabis Club of Guelph.
Police raided the club and some related residences earlier this month. Four individuals face a variety of charges.
“I think (the raid) was bogus. I really don’t know how else to put it,” said Morrison, who bought marijuana at the club’s Baker Street location since December. Read more »
Mayor meets with pot dispensary society
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Thu, 05/13/2010 - 11:50pm
By Monisha Martins - Maple Ridge NewsIf the mayor of Maple Ridge had his way, marijuana would regulated and taxed.
“In Ernie’s perfect world, it would be dispensed from a pharmacy just like all other medicine,” said Ernie Daykin, after a meeting Tuesday with the director of the Always Growing Green Society, Michael Joinson, and marijuana activists Dana Larsen and Jacob Hunter.
The sit-down with Daykin and district staff was organized after The Always Growing Green Society opened Taggs Medical Cannabis Dispensary on 224th Street, without warning, last week.
MDs, patients back marijuana compassion clubs
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Wed, 05/05/2010 - 4:58am
CBC NewsCompassion clubs offer a range of medical marijuana products to fill a void in Health Canada's legal supply channel, doctors and patients say.
Ottawa offers only one strain of medical marijuana, and the only legal way to purchase it is through Health Canada. Medical users insist the different strains of marijuana provided by compassion clubs offer different kinds of pain relief, such as for epilepsy, multiple sclerosis or spinal cord injury. However, there hasn't been any research testing those claims.
First Canadian guidelines issued for opioid painkillers
Submitted by Nicole Seguin on Tue, 05/04/2010 - 7:00am
By: Carly Weeks, Globe and MailThe first Canadian guidelines have been created to keep powerful opioid painkillers out of reach of potential abusers and put them into the hands of patients who need them.
The guidelines urge doctors to thoroughly assess patients before prescribing the painkilling drugs and closely monitor them to mitigate risks of abuse, addiction and overdose. Doctors must also stop prescribing opioids if patients don’t respond to treatment or there is a serious risk of addiction, misuse or other problems.
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