Congress Moves to Allow VA Doctors to Recommend Medical Marijuana to Veterans

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From alternet.org

Another Big Step: Congress Moves to Allow VA Doctors to Recommend Medical Marijuana to Veterans

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The move is intended to ease access to medical marijuana for veterans suffering from PTSD, serious injuries, and other debilitating conditions.




By Phillip Smith / AlterNet
May 19, 2016

The House on Thursday approved an amendment to the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs appropriations bill that should ease access to medical marijuana for veterans suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), serious wounds, and other debilitating conditions.

The Senate Appropriations Committee approved a similar measure in its version of the appropriations bill last month. And later on Thursday, the Senate as a whole passed the appropriations bill.

Authored by Reps. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) and Joe Heck (R-NV), the measure would bar the spending of federal funds to enforce a Veterans Health Administration policy that prohibits VA physicians from recommending medical marijuana, even in states where it is legal. Once the measure becomes law, VA docs would no longer face penalties for discussing medical marijuana with patients or for providing recommendations for patients to participate in state-legal medical marijuana programs.

With the ban in place, even in states with medical marijuana laws, veterans must go outside the VA system to get a recommendation or even discuss medical marijuana with their doctors. That VA policy actually expired at the beginning of this year, but would remain in force without congressional action. And Congress has acted.

"Today is a monumental day for us vets," said TJ Thompson, a disabled U.S. Navy Veteran (’98-’04) who lives in Virginia. "Congress has recognized our right to heal, allowing us access to medical cannabis within the VA."

Marijuana policy reformers, who have long fought to remove obstacles to veterans' use of medical marijuana, were pleased, too.

"Prohibiting VA doctors from recommending medical marijuana does nothing to help our veterans," said Robert Capecchi, director of federal policies for the Marijuana Policy Project. "Current VA policy is preventing physicians from thoroughly monitoring patients’ medication decisions and engaging in frank conversations about available treatment options. It dramatically undermines the doctor-patient relationship."

"It’s looking like this could finally be the year the federal government stops making veterans jump through costly, time-consuming hoops just to get legal access to medical marijuana," said Tom Angell, head of Marijuana Majority. "Cannabis has shown great promise in helping veterans deal with PTSD and treat chronic pain, and it's an increasingly attractive alternative to opioids. There’s absolutely no reason the VA. should be preventing its doctors from helping veterans who served our country find relief with medical marijuana."

"We are delighted to lift this outdated, discriminatory policy, which has negatively impacted the lives of so many veterans." said Michael Collins, deputy director for the Drug Policy Alliance’s Office of National Affairs. "We need all options on the table to treat veterans, and finally Congress has seen sense and will allow veterans to be on an equal footing to other residents of medical marijuana states."

After today's votes, the two chambers will take up reconciling and differences between the two versions of the appropriations bills before sending them to the president.

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/house-moves-allow-va-docs-recommend-medical-marijuana-veterans
 
My best friend is a disabled vet who has PTSD among other things. I have been impressed that his VA doctors are fine with him smoking cannabis even though he is in an illegal state. I love it when any part of the medical community wakes up and recognizes the benefits of cannabis.
 

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