Cannabis Treatment Threatens Deadly Painkiller Industry Jan 10, 2012 http://www.blacklistednews.com/Cannabis_Treatment_Threatens_Deadly_Painkiller_Industry/17376/0/38/38/Y/M.html
Anthony
Gucciardi Activist Post
[See also: http://phoenixtears.ca/
]
Pharmaceutical painkillers are now responsible for more
deaths in the United States than heroin and cocaine combined.
These pharmaceuticals are responsible for more than 15,000
deaths conservatively in 2008 alone. With no sign of slowing down, the painkiller
industry is becoming wildly popular among Americans — as a result, so is
the high rate of painkiller abuse.
Classified as dangerous by the U.S. government, cannabis
(even in THC-free form, or free of psychoactive effects) has been identified as
a powerful pain reliever in more than 80 peer-reviewed studies.
You may be aware of the fact that marijuana is usually quite
high in THC (delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol), which is the compound responsible
for the psychoactive effect of cannabis.
In contrast, it is also low in CBD (cannabidiol) content.
Both THC and CBD are known as cannabinoids, however, which interacts with your
body in a very unique way.
In fact, cannabinoids are key when it comes to pain relief.
While this information alone is enough to shatter the traditional beliefs on
government marijuana regulation, the relationship between CBD and THC is even
more revealing.
What you may not be familiar with is how CBD has been shown
to block the effect of THC in the nervous system. This allows for marijuana to
be used with little or no psychoactive effects. Hemp, on the other hand, is
high in CBD and low in THC. This is due to the fact that it is bred to maximize
its fiber, seeds, and oil. Of course these key properties are what it is most
commonly used for.
Trials Indicate Cannabis as an Effective Treatment for
Chronic Pain
In a 2011 study published in the British Journal of Clinical
Pharmacology, researchers examined the effects of cannabinoids on chronic pain
and proper sleep. What they found in their trials challenges federal government
claims that cannabis has Ôno accepted medical useÕ. The researchers conducted
18 trials using cannabinoids in the treatment of chronic pain, and found that
cannabinoids demonstrated a significant painkilling effect as well as
noticeable improvements in sleep in 15 of trials. Compared, to placebo, the
cannabinoids were extremely effective.
Most importantly, there were no adverse effects.
Another study, performed in 2002, reached similar
conclusions. Finding cannabis to aid in pain relief as well as quality of
sleep, researchers from the McGill University Health Centre stated in summary
that cannabis can be used as an effective way of improving pain, mood, and
sleep in some patients with chronic pain.
There are many forms of the cannabis plant, many without
mind-altering properties, many of which can be utilized without adverse
reactions, as detailed in the peer-reviewed research. It is also quite clear
that the painkiller industry simply cannot continue to wreak havoc on the lives
of many, and a natural alternative must soon emerge to prevent another 15,000
plus deaths this year.
Why is the federal government refusing to admit the
medicinal properties of cannabis and the unique ability of this substance to
curb pain, insomnia, and impaired mood? This is only one example of how the
government decides what is and what is not good for your health.