British MS patient will fight for cannabis
A multiple sclerosis patient is prepared to go to the European Court of Human Rights to demand free cannabis on the NHS.
Brighton woman Pauline Johnson has had MS for 20 years but said her mobility has deteriorated so much in the past year after coming off the drug that she is in a wheelchair.
Ms Johnson, 64, took part in cannabis-based treatment trials from 2003 to 2006 but she said she was left "high and dry" when she asked if her GP would still fund the treatment.
Pauline Johnson - "the drug worked, so now what?"
She said the drug called Sativex, which was in a spray form, helped with the muscle stiffness and to relax her.
Since the trials ended, Ms Johnson, of Hampshire Court, Upper St James's Street, Brighton, claimed she has been prescribed a muscle relaxant that does not help her.
Now she has been accepted for a 12-week study being carried out by the Royal Sussex County Hospital neurology department in Brighton for potential treatment for patients with MS symptoms.
Ms Johnson said: "We are guinea pigs but it is a serious illness and you have to have a positive attitude towards it.
"When I did the last trial I heard about it from my MS meetings and said I'd like to try it, but had to wait six years until they would take me.
"The spray helped to relax me and gave me a good night's sleep. I was struggling before that but it really helped.
"I asked the doctor if they'd continue funding me but nobody got back to me and I had to go on my normal drugs."
During the Multiple Sclerosis and Extract of Cannabis clinical study, researchers will find out if a drug with extract of cannabis plants helps relieve the pain and muscle stiffness.
Patients will attend six regular clinic visits over three months and receive the active treatment or a placebo.
Ms Johnson said: "I really don't want to do this then deteriorate again. You will try anything to help yourself.
"I want people to be aware we want this drug. If it works for us why can't they continue it after the trial? Some people do not have the strength to fight but I do - and I'd go to the European Court of Human Rights to do it."
A Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals spokeswoman said: "Given that the study involves a controlled drug, no medication can be given once the trial has finished, as dictated by the drug agencies nationally."
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British MS patient will fight for cannabis
- Twichaldinho
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echc1
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i'm totally with you there twichaldinho.......govt are happy to get revenue from big business for commercial hemp but won't allow or help the common person....let us grow, and let us pay tax on it at the same rate per tonne that the bodyshop pays.....the suffering will benefit,the tokers benefit....and the state would benefit if said tax was used to combat class A.......how many die each year from LEGAL drink???? maybe they should try banning that!!!!!......this makes me want to leave the uk more and more
part of the blame goes onto big Pharma, they are scared shitless of a plant that can virtually grow anywhere and makes so many of their chem based pills obsolete and useless. i say flush those fuckin pills down the toilet, let philip morris sell 20 joints in a pack like smokes, tax it, everyone makes $$$, we pay less and dont have to hide in the shadows. PROBLEM SOLVED 
If it wasnt for the brits, ID BE DUTCH RIGHT NOW