From Military.com:
“VA Comes Out Against Bills on
Medical Marijuana for Veterans”
The Department of Veterans
Affairs opposes three legislative proposals that would expand research on
medical marijuana at the VA and give veterans access to the drug in states
where it is legal. During a hearing Tuesday on eight VA health-related bills
under consideration by Congress, VA officials told House lawmakers that as long
as marijuana is illegal under federal law, the department cannot support
legislation that promotes its role at the VA. "[The House Veterans Affairs
Committee] can make strong proposals for us to move forward with
recommendations of filling out forms and such but, in the end, we need to go
back to the [Drug Enforcement Agency] and [Justice Department] for their
opinion," said Larry Mole, chief consultant for population health at the
VA. Three of the bills before the House Veterans Affairs health subcommittee
relate to medical marijuana. One, the Veterans Equal Access Act, H.R. 1647,
sponsored by Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Oregon, would allow VA health providers to
recommend medical marijuana to their veteran patients and fill out the
necessary paperwork for them to enroll in state marijuana programs. Blumenauer,
who has introduced the bill in every Congress since 2014, said that, for some
veterans, marijuana and cannabis derivatives are lifesavers that keep them from
using addictive medications such as opioids to treat post-traumatic stress
disorder, chronic pain, seizures and glaucoma. Yet VA health care providers are
not allowed to recommend it. "Opioids steal the lives of 115 Americans
every day ... as veterans with PTSD, chronic pain and any number of ailments
are looking for relief, lethal opioid overdoses among VA patients are almost twice
the national average. We are doing something wrong," he said. Another
bill, the VA Medicinal Cannabis Research Act, H.R. 712, would direct the VA to
conduct a large-scale clinical trial on the effects of cannabis on conditions
such as PTSD and chronic pain. Bill sponsor Rep. Lou Correa, D-California, said
the research would examine the effectiveness of cannabis on various health
conditions, as well as delivery methods. "It's time to do research. It's
time for veterans to know what cannabis is good for and what cannabis is not
good for," Correa said. A third, the Veterans Cannabis Use for Safe
Healing Act, H.R. 2192, would protect veterans' benefits by prohibiting the VA
from denying health care and compensation for veterans participating in a state
medical marijuana program. Keita Franklin, the VA's national director of
suicide prevention, said that while the department supports medical marijuana
research and is currently involved in a trial for treating PTSD, it opposes the
bills. According to Franklin, VA doctors would be subject to criminal
prosecution if they recommended medical marijuana or made referrals to state
agencies, as specified by DEA guidance. And Correa's bill, she said, would not
follow standard practice in medical research. "Typically, a smaller
early-phase trial would advance our knowledge and the benefits and risks
regarding cannabis before moving to the expansive approach described in this
legislation," she said. "Any trial involving human subjects must
include an evaluation on the risks and the safety, and include the smallest
number of participants to avoid putting the subjects at increased risk
unnecessarily. For these reasons, we don't support this legislation." She
added that the third piece of legislation is unnecessary because VA policy
states that the department cannot deny benefits based on marijuana use,
although VA physicians are allowed to tailor a patient's prescription
medications based on whether they are using cannabis. Veterans advocates who
testified expressed varying levels of support for the bills. Carlos Fuentes,
director of national legislative service for the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said
the VFW does not support the Veterans Equal Access bill because it doesn't
think the VA should recommend unproven medical treatments, nor should it
authorize a treatment for a veteran that would require the former service
member to get it outside the VA, where they would be responsible for finding a
quality product and paying for it. The VFW does, however, support VA research
on cannabis. "VA's overreliance on opioids to treat chronic pain and other
conditions has led to addiction and even deaths. To its credit ... VA has
reduced the number of patients to whom it has prescribed opioids by 22 percent.
Now, VA must expand research on the efficacy of nontraditional alternatives to
opioids," Fuentes said. Joy Ilam, national legislative director for
Disabled American Veterans, agreed. "We want to make sure there is no harm
done. Research is the first step in doing that," Ilam said. Iraq and
Afghanistan Veterans of America research director Stephanie Mullen said the
IAVA supports cannabis research and access to it. "It's past time for VA
to catch up," Mullen said. "Veterans are suffering from their
injuries today." Among the other bills and draft bills discussed at the
hearing was one that seeks to expand complementary and alternative therapies
and treatments at VA medical facilities, and another that would require the VA
to report suicides and attempts that occur on VA campuses within a week of them
happening. Franklin said the VA supports both proposals.
^ Medical marijuana should be
legal for everyone (soldier, veteran and citizen) around the country at the
Federal and State level. The VA should rethink it's opposition. We are not talking about random drugs, recreational marijuana or opioids. but about marijuana that is prescribed and controlled by doctors to help people with extreme pain. ^
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