Medical marijuana legalization reduces painkiller overdose deaths

Eekman

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(NaturalNews) A massive joint study (no pun intended) by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City was conducted to determine the impact on reducing prescription opioid deaths in states with medical marijuana.

Would you have guessed that there was up to a 33 percent reduction in opioid overdose deaths among the 13 states that allow medical marijuana? The study's results were published late August 2014, surprisingly, in the
Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Their analysis covered the period from 1999 to 2010, as the 13 states, beginning with California, initiated their medical marijuana policies.

By examining state death certificates, the researchers discovered that, after the first year of legalizing cannabis for medical purposes, the prescribed opioid painkiller overdose deaths declined by 20 percent. After two years of legalized medical marijuana in each state, opioid overdose deaths declined by 25 percent. After five years, the rate had declined 33 percent.




The DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) wants to throw everyone in jail who smokes a benign joint for relaxation and heightened awareness or uses any cannabis oil to safely remedy and cure diseases and health afflictions that expensive pharmaceuticals have usually exacerbated more than relieved.

The DEA, under the US Justice Department's umbrella, the federal agency that also runs the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which sponsored illegal gun-running to Mexican drug cartels and gangs with their covert "Fast and Furious" operation, has decided to continue listing cannabis as a Schedule I drug.

Here is an excerpt from the official DEA site:

Schedule I drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse. Schedule I drugs are the most dangerous drugs of all the drug schedules with potentially severe psychological or physical dependence. [Emphasis added]

And just to give you an idea of how heavy-handed and fixed the DEA is on ensuring that they get heavily funded to feed the prison system by throwing
non-violent pot smokers in jail with the motto "tough work, vital mission" on their site, here's a true incident with an ironic twist.

In 1974, the Justice Department's DEA selected the Virginia Medical College to receive NIH (National Institutes of Health) funding to do marijuana research on lab rats and prove how marijuana adversely affects the immune system and brain.

The researchers probably surprised themselves, as they witnessed cannabis-exposed rats recover from brain cancer instead. It was a surprise that didn't please the DEA, which ordered the funding stopped and had the medical college's research documents destroyed.

Since then there have been several international medical cannabis studies that have resulted in positive results as treatments for epilepsy, seizures, pain, non-appetite, nausea, anxiety, PTSD, inflammatory bowel disorders and cancer.

By contrast, medically approved pharmaceutical opioid pain relievers are classified as Schedule II, which includes legally prescribed opioids that cause more
overdose deaths when medical marijuana is not available:

Schedule II drugs, substances, or chemicals are defined as drugs with a high potential for abuse, less abuse potential than Schedule I drugs, with use potentially leading to severe psychological or physical dependence. These drugs are also considered dangerous. Some examples of Schedule II drugs are:

cocaine, methamphetamine, methadone, hydromorphone (Dilaudid), meperidine (Demerol), oxycodone (OxyContin), fentanyl, Dexedrine, Adderall, and Ritalin [Emphasis added]

Vicodin is in Schedule III. Note that the phrase "no currently accepted medical use" is not used for Schedule II, III, IV or V, only Schedule I.

Busting down doors and crashing into terrorized homes with "illegal" marijuana at 6:00 AM, maybe killing a family dog or two, is a "tough necessary mission." Prescribing dangerous Ritalin to children under five is legal
.

 
As well as 25% reduction in Vet suicides too.Pretty awesome!!And that write up is slightly off I think.,.?I believe they are talking (if not done already)moving Vicodin to C2 status.Very awesome man,Thanks for sharing man! good news!..Mostly
 
This was a feed. just came out last night. I only bring the information, I cannot verify it's content.

However, this is a reliable source for me most of the time.

It is like anything else, you have to read between the lines.



Eek
 
Hmm.Interesting .ill get back to ya..LOL! gotta go ask my sis.shes a nationally certified pharmacy tech, n thats what she was telling me.so ill have to grill her and show me her sources.thanks man!
 
Well the point is that the Marijuana is helping.


To me the article says: People who have the option of using Cannabis are more likely to do so, which results in lesser people using and/or overdosing from pharm medicines.

I am not so worried about classifications, except where cannbis is at.

However, the DEA pushing Big Pharm's agenda is concerniing.


Eek
 
Well I got that LOL! I totally agree bro!LOL!:pighug:

I just see info that(my sources lead me to believe otherwise until i talk to me sis But yer right its a moot point really) could be nationally changing very soon n I was just sayin keep an eye out cuz its larger than just a pharma campain imo.I think the vet thing(thats in my PTSD thread somewhere)is a national current statistic and mostly dealing with reported cases.So the actual Percentage is most likely much higher in all honesty.But SUPER AWESOME BLOOSOM across the board dude!LOL!
 
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