Marijuana medical choice dilemma health care concept as a person standing in front of two paths with one offering traditional medicine and the other option with cannabis.

by Paul Fassa
Health Impact News

Last year’s November elections included several state ballots to either introduce medical marijuana or expand beyond permissible medical applications and allow “recreational” use for adults.  Former marijuana resistant states Florida, North Dakota, Arkansas, and Montana passed medical cannabis measures by popular vote.

States that had medical marijuana allowances already in place, California, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Maine approved adult recreational marijuana.  But the biggest surprise for many was Arizona voters’ rejection of an adult recreational use measure, Proposition 205. Arizona was the only state that refused to advance from its current cannabis status at the polls.

The tide of cannabis acceptance was rising to float the “Yes on Proposition 205” measure to expand state-wide allowances for medical cannabis to the next level of accepting it for adult recreational use. Then something happened: huge cash infusions from vested interest corporations to front groups and “astroturf” groups came out to oppose the Arizona marijuana measure.

Medical Marijuana a Threat to the Opioid Painkiller Market

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They often do this by funding groups that promote apparent good causes in name but are actually front groups for industries to reduce or eliminate competition or avoid regulation. With cannabis, those front groups are private prison associations, law enforcement agencies, liquor lobbies, and the pharmaceutical industry. (Source)

Arizonians for Responsible Drug Policy (ARDP) was the major front group for hire that publicly opposed Arizona’s Proposition 205. And its main donor of a half million dollars was a pharmaceutical company based out of Arizona known as Insys Therapeutics. That $500,000 contribution was five times the only other six-figure donation of $100,000 on record to the ARDP.

The ARDP used the money to purchase media advertisements featuring paid politicians creating doubts with lies about cannabis’ safety because it supposedly hadn’t been proven safe yet. This is a total lie that raises doubts enough with fence sitters or exacerbates false “Reefer Madness” fears to create a larger mass of voters pulling the “No on Proposition 205” lever rather than the Yes lever.

Let the hypocrisy begin. Here’s a mission statement on Insys’ official investment paperwork:

Our goal is to become a leading biopharmaceutical company focused on CINV [Chemotherapy Induced Nausea and Vomiting], pain management and other central nervous system disorders, with specific expertise in the expanding synthetic cannabinoid derivatives and specialized opioid markets.

Opioid markets they say? Insys most marketed product at the time of the November 2016 ballot to allow cannabis adult recreational use was, and still is, a sublingual spray mist opiate fentanyl chemical called Subsys.

It is one of the top opioid painkillers that is leading the rise of opioid addiction and overdose deaths from prescription drugs.

Insys Therapeutics Subsys sales have skyrocketed over the past few years, and their marketing strategies have inspired serious investigations into their blatant kickback schemes that encourage physicians to over-prescribe dangerous and addictive fentanyl off-label. The FDA had approved their expensive fentanyl sublingual mist, covered by private and governmental insurance for seriously ill cancer patients in pain. Any other use is considered “off-label,” which usually doesn’t draw much corrective attention from the FDA.

But the kickbacks to doctors and other forceful marketing methods pushed by Insys’ reps has led so far to seven convictions and plea bargain confessions. The state governmental investigations began as the trail of dead bodies from opioid addictions and the high costs of these expensive drugs had created a financial crisis with Medicaid and Medicare. But Subsys remains on the market. (Source)

The FDA had recommended Subsys for late stage cancer patient pain, using at lowest possible doses, when other painkillers no longer work.

But that’s a problem with opioids. They do not handle chronic pain as well as cannabis. And as one develops opioid tolerance, the amounts are raised to overcome the tolerance. What can happen eventually is overdosing to the point of not being able to breathe and then, death.

This doesn’t happen with cannabis. As a matter of fact, no one has ever died from overdosing cannabis – ever. It’s impossible. And as one uses cannabis for pain reduction, it’s possible to determine a “sweet spot” dosing that may even be less than when one first started using cannabis for pain. As a matter of proven fact, more people get off of their addiction opioid painkillers in states where marijuana is legal for pain. (Source)

But if pot is allowed for adults without medical prescriptions, then more would be ditching their opioid meds as they realize they’re getting closer to that point where addiction is pushing them to higher dosages approaching lethal levels. Others would realize the side effects of opioid drugs are not worth it. It’s better to use cannabis and suffer less, perhaps even enjoying its use.

So that’s a serious motive for Insys to put up some of their legally questionable marketing techniques to advertise their drugs and to try to minimize cannabis access. Some of their financial success was used recently to settled a 1.1 million dollar lawsuit in Oregon where the Attorney General charged them with “unconscionable, false and deceptive sales tactics.”

Now Insys Has a Synthetic Cannabis Patent Approved

But with the recent FDA approval of Insys Therapeutics Syndros, a synthetic cannabis product intended to treat pain, stock prices are sure to go up. This approval to market Syndros occurred less than half a year after Insys’ half million dollar contribution to help successfully defeat Arizona Proposition 205. Yet another motive for Insys financing against the legal recreational adult use of marijuana.

Leave it to the DEA to hurl the final insult. Syndros is rated as Schedule II in its table of “Controlled Substances.” Cannabis is rated as Schedule I: dangerous, addictive, and without medical merit. Schedule II substances “have a high potential for abuse which may lead to severe psychological or physical dependence.”

But they are allowed to be prescribed for “medical” reasons. Examples of Schedule II narcotics include; hydromorphone (Dilaudid®), methadone (Dolophine®), meperidine (Demerol®), oxycodone (OxyContin®, Percocet®), and fentanyl (Sublimaze®, Duragesic®).

Yes, the DEA considers synthetic cannabis has medical merit while natural whole plant cannabis has none. People who use cannabis medically or otherwise do not become addicted any more than some of us become addicted to certain TV shows.

Any habit formed by marijuana use is easily dropped temporarily or permanently or easily lessened over time.

Factually, nasty side effects are common among almost all pharmaceutical attempts to cheat nature and use patents to create exclusive high-cost sales.

You can count on them, along with the beer and liquor industry associations, to support front groups who are ignorant of cannabis’ history and current medical realities to maintain marijuana as a dangerous drug while creating even more dangerous drugs as legal medicine.

Other Sources:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/apr/03/big-pharma-marijuana-competition-insys-arizona

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/09/09/a-maker-of-deadly-painkillers-is-bankrolling-the-opposition-to-legal-marijuana-in-arizona/?utm_campaign=buffer&utm_content=buffer98ef7&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_term=.3a756317e96e

http://www.cnbc.com/2015/11/04/the-deadly-drug-appeal-of-insys-pharmaceuticals.html

http://www.cnbc.com/2016/02/19/sales-rep-for-insys-painkiller-company-pleads-guilty.html