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Veterans Affairs Department Issues Directive Allowing The Prescription Of Medical Marijuana

HOPE YEN   07/24/10 11:28 PM ET   AP

Marijuana

WASHINGTON — Patients treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics will be able to use medical marijuana in the 14 states where it's legal, according to new federal guidelines.

The directive from the Veterans Affairs Department in the coming week is intended to clarify current policy that says veterans can be denied pain medication if they use illegal drugs. Veterans groups have complained for years that this could bar veterans from VA benefits if they were caught using medical marijuana.

The new guidance does not authorize VA doctors to begin prescribing medical marijuana, which is considered an illegal drug under federal law. But it will now make clear that in the 14 states where state and federal law are in conflict, VA clinics generally will allow the use of medical marijuana for veterans already taking it under other clinicians.

"For years, there have been veterans coming back from the Iraq war who needed medical marijuana and had to decide whether they were willing to cut down on their VA medications," John Targowski, a legal adviser to the group Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access, which worked with the VA on the issue.

Targowski in an interview Saturday said that confusion over the government's policy might have led some veterans to distrust their doctors or avoid the VA system.

Dr. Robert A. Petzel, the VA's undersecretary for health, sent a letter to Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access this month that spells out the department's policy. The guidelines will be distributed to the VA's 900 care facilities around the country in the next week.

Petzel makes clear that a VA doctor could reserve the right to modify a veteran's treatment plan if there were risks of a bad interaction with other drugs.

"If a veteran obtains and uses medical marijuana in a manner consistent with state law, testing positive for marijuana would not preclude the veteran from receiving opioids for pain management" in a VA facility, Petzel wrote. "The discretion to prescribe, or not prescribe, opioids in conjunction with medical marijuana, should be determined on clinical grounds."

Opioids are narcotic painkillers, and include morphine, oxycodone and methadone.

Under the previous policy, local VA clinics in some of the 14 states, such as Michigan, had opted to allow the use of medical marijuana because there no rule explicitly prohibiting them from doing so.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, there are 14 states and the District of Columbia with medical marijuana laws. They are: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. New Jersey also recently passed a medical marijuana law, which is scheduled to be implemented next January.

___

Online:

Department of Veterans Affairs: http://www.va.gov/

Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access: http://www.veteransformedicalmarijuana.org/

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WASHINGTON — Patients treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics will be able to use medical marijuana in the 14 states where it's legal, according to new federal guidelines. The directi...
WASHINGTON — Patients treated at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics will be able to use medical marijuana in the 14 states where it's legal, according to new federal guidelines. The directi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Brennan
Happy Unemployed Disabled Vet
09:44 PM on 07/31/2010
Good news!
12:22 PM on 07/28/2010
Nicon,
Thanks for clarifying the story beyond the headline.
The VA will not write prescriptions for MMJ.
The only thing that has changed is the VA will not penalize vets for having a MMj prescription obtained outside the VA.
Look beyond the headline to the VA directive that the story refers to. It is pretty clear what the VA will do and it will not allow its PCP's to prescribe MMJ because at the federal level marijuana is still illegal.
Still, this is a step in the right direction.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
11:10 PM on 07/27/2010
Liquor companies and Big Tobacco have spent billions pushing the demonization of marijuana. Perhaps they'll have to try and outlaw Basil: "Pesto is the green blood of the devil!"
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jimme
They're Right, but never correct.
11:21 AM on 07/26/2010
They can't use something that can be helpful to them yet they can drink themselves silly.
Alcohol is 100x worse than pot but it's legal. Why,because people can grow their own and no money would be made through taxes or by a corporation.
It's time people realized that pot isn't what it's portryed as. It doesn't alter your mind anywhere near what whiskey does. Thousands killed by drunk drivers every year and not one pot related death.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cat-Lover
Cats=Independence
06:41 PM on 07/25/2010
I'm curious to know how Alaska can be listed with liberal states?
05:35 PM on 07/25/2010
Who'd a thunk the VA would be leading the way in responsible compassionate care? With hope, other federal and state agencies will soon recognize the legitimacy of medical marijuana.

Reclassifications of agent orange conditions and PTSD, excellent tracking of preventive care, overall expanded care, electronic records systems, and now official recognition of medical marijuana - the VA has come a long, long way from their shameful past, and the leadership should be lauded.

I don't know how much direct influence retired general Shinseki has had on this specific policy change, but I think he's really a soldier's soldier, and it's starting to bear fruit. President Obama deserves credit for getting him in there, especially after Shinseki was misused by the Bush administration.

Shinseki could have gone the corporate route or speaking $$$ or faded from sight. Instead he accepted the appointment to serve soldiers. That's rare commitment. The VA is now one agency I'm happy to send tax $$$ to.

We can never thank our vets enough for their sacrifices
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
11:13 PM on 07/27/2010
I think there are now enough doctors, vets and citizens who know the benefits of marijuana that government can't forever stand in the way.

Concerning Agent Orange, only in the last few years did the VFW finally win concession that Agent Orange is linked to early-onset Multiple Sclerosis. This means that most of those afflicted are in their 60s. That's a long time to wait for help, but shows that vets couldn't wait around "hoping" the VA would become caring.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RevRayGreen
03:46 PM on 07/25/2010
http://www.veteransformedicalmarijuana.org/

Incorporated in 2007, Veterans for Medical Marijuana Access (VMMA) advocates for veterans' rights to access medical marijuana for therapeutic purposes. VMMA also works to minimize the harm associated with marijuana use, which many veterans believe to be conviction and incarceration.

VMMA encourages all legislative bodies to endorse veterans' rights to use medical marijuana therapeutically and responsibly, and is working to end all prohibitions associated with such use.

VMMA is working to preserve the long established doctor-patient relationship to privacy rights and to safely discuss medical marijuana use within the V.A. healthcare system without fear of punishment or retribution.

Here are the latest VA statistics about Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans:

•Veterans: 981,834 (out of nearly two million deployed)
•Veterans Treated at VA Hospitals and Clinics: 425,538 (43.3% of veterans)
•Veterans Diagnosed by VA with Mental Health Condition: 193,879 (45.6% of veterans treated by VA)
•Veterans Diagnosed by VA with PTSD: 114,908 (27.0% of veterans treated by VA)
•Veterans Filing Disability Claims Against VA: 381,782 (38.9% of veterans)
•Veterans with Approved PTSD Claims: 53,079 (46.2% of the veterans diagnosed by VA with PTSD)
04:56 PM on 07/25/2010
Thanks for highlighting the link and VMMA info
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RevRayGreen
09:17 PM on 07/25/2010
#2
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Randjamz
02:10 PM on 07/25/2010
That's great news if only the CDPHE will allow it as a condition that quailfies for the MMJ Registry by recommendation by a doctor.In any case,this is one step closer to getting the doctor's recommendation of MMJ to treat Chronic Pain and hopefully PTSD,which affects thousands of veterans(including my late great father,SGT,Martinez of the Korean War) who suffered needlessly and self medicated with alcohol;which subsequently led to his death years ago! Maybe if he would have used Marijuana/Cannabis he might still be alive. "RJM"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kleighhoff
Relief is the order of business...
01:23 PM on 07/25/2010
One more step in the right direction. Big Pharma....suck it!
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fumes
midnight toker
10:01 AM on 07/25/2010
somewhere..

a founding father is going ''WOOHOO!!!''

In 1762, "Virginia awarded bounties for hempculture and
manufacture, and imposed penalties upon those who did not
produse it." George Washington was growing hemp at Mount Vernon three years
later--presumably for its fiber, though it has been argued that
Washington was also concerned to increase the medicinal or
intoxicating potency of his marijuana plants.
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Did_george_washington_grow_weed_in_his_garden
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
firewmn
~now you're play'n with fire~
09:48 AM on 07/25/2010
a natural herb to help people.! Whata concept.! I support medical marijuana and completely support ending the prohibtion on marijunana through LEGALIZATION..!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
03:00 AM on 07/25/2010
It's about damn time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gordon Soderberg
The Green Veteran
12:29 AM on 07/25/2010
Time for veterans to start their own clinics and push the issue nationally. This will help veterans all over the country,
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fumes
midnight toker
11:23 PM on 07/24/2010
somewhere..

nancy raygun is going..

noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!
10:31 PM on 07/24/2010
Great! Pot has the unique quality of allowing retrospection without repeat trauma.