Extols the many benefits of industrial hemp for the environment and human…
The Medicine in Marijuana
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This year, 55 million Americans will spend about 55 billion dollars on the medicine in marijuana. In 32 states and the District of Columbia, they will use it for a myriad of medical conditions, depending on anecdotal advice about the frequency and dosage of cannabis, a plant with over 400 different chemical molecules. It's a messy mix of medicine, policy and politics--while cannabis is still federally classified as a Schedule 1 drug.
Based on the 2017 National Academy of Sciences report about the effectiveness of cannabis for treating the side-effects of chemotherapy, chronic pain, epilepsy, and PTSD, THE MEDICINE IN MARIJUANA tells patients' stories, and those of the practitioners and researchers involved in their care: an infant with unremitting seizures; a man with an inoperable cancer; a woman with chronic pain; a veteran of 5 tours of duty with PTSD.
Across centuries and cultures, people have told stories about the healing powers of cannabis, but the plural of anecdote is not evidence. Now, the science is catching up with the stories, and THE MEDICINE IN MARIJUANA tells it like it is.
'The Medicine in Marijuana shows the personal side of the medical marijuana controversy that is important for people to see. It does not contend that medical marijuana is effective for all diseases or that it is risk free. It clearly identifies the weakness in many states' programs, including that physicians need to rely on dispensary personnel who may not be trained in human diseases and pharmacology.' C. Michael White, Department Head and Professor of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
'Informative and balanced...An important historical perspective on the medicinal uses of cannabis...The individual stories of people whose lives have been changed by the use of cannabis for their medical conditions are moving, but at the same time, the film is careful to stress that the 'plural of anecdote is not evidence.' Until cannabis is removed from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, scientists are prevented from doing the much needed clinical trials to understand the medicinal benefits of this substance - this is the 'cannabis conundrum.'' Clayton Mosher, Professor of Sociology, Washington State University, Co-Author, In the Weeds: Demonization, Legalization, and the Evolution of U.S. Marijuana Policy
'As a scientist working with Cannabis Sativa, I am delighted to see a film that takes an honest and thorough view of what this crop is capable of, what we have data to support, and where the science is lacking. This film raises the important point that research is necessary and that the plural of anecdotes is not data...This film does a wonderful job clarifying some of the misconceptions out there and replacing those misconceptions with very solid information.' Jennifer Gilbert Jenkins, Assistant Professor of Agricultural Science, SUNY-Morrisville
'Medicine in Marijuana is a good introduction to the scientific challenges and thinking around cannabis as medicine...It focuses on what we do know, and more importantly, what we don't.' Jason Hockenberry, Associate Professor of Health Policy and Management, Emory University
'Comprehensive and balanced...Sure to spark debates about the merits and potential medical efficacy of marijuana, this film asks the viewer to think critically about the ongoing marijuana debate. With testimony from patients, scientists, medical professionals, and marijuana providers, The Medicine in Marijuana offers great potential as a teaching and learning resource.' Santiago Ivan Guerra, Associate Professor of Southwest Studies, Colorado College
'Fantastic. This isn't just a film promoting the medicinal use of marijuana, but rather brings to light some very important issues and considerations...Governmental regulations limit research on cannabis, therefore, we as scientists, cannot make evidence-based recommendations...Medicine in Marijuana makes a very important point that patients are not receiving medical advice or instructions from a pharmacist on dosing, indication, strain, etc. and healthcare professionals are not educated on cannabis in their training, so we are leaving the public on their own to treat themselves.' Christine Rabinak, Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice, Wayne State University
Citation
Main credits
Marash, Dave (narrator)
Daitz, Ben (screenwriter)
Daitz, Ben (producer)
Daitz, Ben (director)
Judge, Ned (screenwriter)
Judge, Ned (producer)
Judge, Ned (director)
Judge, Ned (videographer)
Other credits
Original music, Sid Fendley; photography, Ned Judge [and 3 others].
Distributor subjects
Anthropology; Cancer; Cannabis; Drug Policy; Epilepsy; Government; Health; Medicine; Law; Law Enforcement; Pain Management; PTSD; Science; Social Work; Sociology; ; SociologyKeywords
THE MEDICINE IN MARIJUANA - Transcript
00:00:00.08]
[jaunty piano music]
[00:00:15.02]
- [Dave Marash] It's Latin
name is cannabis sativa,
[00:00:18.02]
and it's known by hundreds of others.
[00:00:20.04]
But it's the slang word,
marijuana, that has spread
[00:00:23.08]
around the world, naming
one of the oldest plants
[00:00:27.04]
that man has cultivated as a crop
[00:00:29.09]
and consumed as a medicine.
[00:00:33.02]
[jaunty piano music]
[00:00:43.00]
[machine beeping]
[00:00:47.06]
- [Nicole] Yeah?
[00:00:48.07]
- [Dave] Amylea's seizures
began soon after her birth,
[00:00:51.07]
and they were relentless.
[00:00:53.07]
None of the epilepsy medicines worked.
[00:00:56.03]
She almost died.
[00:00:58.06]
- She has a rare epilepsy disorder.
[00:01:01.08]
She shouldn't be here today.
[00:01:04.05]
So, because of cannabis...
[00:01:06.03]
Saved her life.
[00:01:08.02]
[machine beeping]
[baby babbling]
[00:01:09.01]
You're okay, baby.
[00:01:09.09]
You're okay.
[00:01:12.05]
You're okay.
[00:01:13.08]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:01:39.03]
- I always say that
cannabis has been a medicine
[00:01:41.02]
for a lot longer than it hasn't been.
[00:01:43.05]
Archeological evidence suggests
[00:01:45.00]
that cannabis has been a medicine
[00:01:46.06]
or used for medicinal purposes
for probably 3,000 years.
[00:01:53.03]
- [Dave] The non-psychoactive,
fibrous stalk
[00:01:56.01]
of cannabis is called hemp.
[00:01:58.02]
For centuries, it's been
traded around the world
[00:02:00.08]
to make cloth, and oil and rope.
[00:02:03.07]
- [Announcer] For the sailor
no less than the hangman,
[00:02:05.08]
hemp was indispensable.
[00:02:09.07]
[Scissors clicking]
[00:02:14.05]
- [Dave] It's the cannabis
flower and its resins
[00:02:17.01]
that make the medicine,
[00:02:18.05]
and the earliest evidence
of its use comes from Asia.
[00:02:22.05]
It apparently worked and word got around.
[00:02:25.08]
Over centuries and across
cultures it was recommended
[00:02:29.01]
by healers, for epilepsy, depression,
[00:02:31.06]
inflammation, and pain.
[00:02:33.09]
No doubt most folks who used it were aware
[00:02:36.02]
that it had some interesting qualities.
[00:02:39.08]
Those other pleasurable
effects were reason enough
[00:02:43.02]
for a crusade against
the so-called evil weed
[00:02:47.03]
by the first chief of the
Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
[00:02:50.05]
Harry Anslinger.
[00:02:52.01]
[Loud explosion]
[00:02:53.04]
- Well, Harry Anslinger went on a campaign
[00:02:56.08]
because Anslinger had a
passionate hatred of cannabis.
[00:03:01.05]
He thought that cannabis was associated
[00:03:04.01]
with black men having
relationships with white women.
[00:03:09.05]
- [Announcer] Marijuana, the burning weed
[00:03:11.06]
with its roots in hell.
[00:03:14.09]
- [Dave] Anslinger was
also a very effective
[00:03:17.01]
political bureaucrat,
and he pushed passage
[00:03:20.03]
of the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act...
[00:03:23.07]
[dramatic orchestral music]
[00:03:26.01]
...that effectively made
it an illegal substance.
[00:03:33.02]
But cultural traditions
that have been around
[00:03:35.03]
for thousands of years are
difficult to stamp out.
[00:03:38.09]
So, in spite of Harry Anslinger,
[00:03:40.08]
people all over the world
continue to use cannabis
[00:03:44.07]
for both its medicinal and
its pleasurable properties.
[00:03:49.02]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:03:53.00]
Dr. Rafael Mechoulam,
professor of chemistry
[00:03:55.08]
at Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
[00:03:58.00]
was interested in the pleasure part.
[00:04:00.01]
What about cannabis makes people high?
[00:04:03.05]
So, in 1964, the world found out.
[00:04:06.01]
His lab isolated Delta 9-THC,
[00:04:09.06]
the primary psychoactive
molecule in cannabis.
[00:04:12.09]
And then his team identified
cannabidiol, or CBD,
[00:04:17.07]
a molecule that's not psychoactive,
[00:04:19.08]
but has important therapeutic properties.
[00:04:22.09]
- And we know that in the
brain we have a receptor,
[00:04:26.07]
the cannabinoid One or CB1 receptor.
[00:04:29.07]
Turns out that this receptor
[00:04:31.01]
is the single most densely
populated G protein-coupled
[00:04:36.00]
7 transmembrane domain
receptor in the human brain.
[00:04:41.00]
Nobody learns about
this in medical school.
[00:04:43.09]
[clock ticking]
[00:04:48.00]
[pulsing instrumental music]
[00:04:50.00]
- [Dave] Scientists knew
that THC and CBD had to bind
[00:04:53.09]
to receptors in our
bodies to have an effect.
[00:04:57.02]
Receptors are chemical
molecules embedded in our brains
[00:05:01.00]
and all our body's tissues.
[00:05:02.09]
They can sense and lock
on to biochemical signals
[00:05:06.06]
like insulin and adrenaline,
but also THC and CBD.
[00:05:11.08]
Researchers found those
receptors and named them.
[00:05:14.08]
The CB1 receptor is very
abundant in brain tissue,
[00:05:18.05]
and the CB2 receptors
are in our immune system
[00:05:21.08]
and all of our organs and tissues.
[00:05:24.06]
Turns out those receptors are not just
[00:05:26.08]
for the cannabis plant.
[00:05:28.04]
Dr. Mechoulam and his team discovered
[00:05:30.06]
that we have our own system
of cannabinoid-like chemicals.
[00:05:34.04]
They're called endocannabinoids,
[00:05:36.05]
and they attach to the same
CB1 and CB2 receptors as THC.
[00:05:43.01]
Scientists now know that
the endocannabinoid system
[00:05:46.05]
is present in all animal
species down to sponges.
[00:05:51.06]
It helps us modulate pain and
stress, our mood and memory,
[00:05:55.07]
our physical activity and sleep.
[00:05:58.03]
It helps maintain balance, homeostasis.
[00:06:04.09]
The discovery of the
endocannabinoid system led
[00:06:08.01]
to an explosion in research.
[00:06:10.02]
The plant has over 400 chemical entities
[00:06:13.03]
and their actions,
alone or in combination,
[00:06:16.03]
are just beginning to be explored.
[00:06:19.03]
But there are big hurdles to
doing research on patients,
[00:06:23.03]
mainly because it is still
classified as a Schedule One,
[00:06:26.09]
dangerous drug by our
government, the same as heroin
[00:06:30.03]
and cocaine, even though
its health risk is minimal.
[00:06:35.02]
For example, there's never
been an overdose death
[00:06:38.02]
due to marijuana.
[00:06:40.00]
Although federal
prohibition hasn't stopped
[00:06:42.02]
about 55 million people
from spending billions,
[00:06:45.05]
that's with a B, on marijuana,
[00:06:47.09]
it has seriously limited
therapeutic research.
[00:06:51.08]
- The only legal source
of cannabis for research
[00:06:54.03]
in the United States is from NIDA,
[00:06:56.09]
the National Institute on Drug Abuse,
[00:06:59.08]
and NIDA has a congressional mandate
[00:07:02.00]
to only study substances of
abuse as substances of abuse.
[00:07:08.01]
- [Dave] So if the
government won't allow it
[00:07:09.07]
to be studied as a medicine,
where do the millions
[00:07:12.06]
of patients go to get
advice on how to use it,
[00:07:16.00]
information about different
strains and dosages?
[00:07:19.04]
Not from their doctor or pharmacist
[00:07:22.00]
but from a so-called bud-tender.
[00:07:24.06]
- So, what we're trying to
do in terms of education,
[00:07:26.07]
and I don't think most
dispensaries are doing it,
[00:07:28.08]
is educating everybody how to use less.
[00:07:33.05]
That's the one thing I think
[00:07:34.08]
that should be going out there now.
[00:07:36.08]
- [Dave] We say it's a cannabis conundrum.
[00:07:38.09]
It's a messy mixture of
medicine, policy, and politics.
[00:07:42.09]
Because of its impact on public health,
[00:07:45.04]
the National Academy
of Sciences was tasked
[00:07:48.00]
with looking at the
science, analyzing the data,
[00:07:50.09]
and grading the evidence for
both the therapeutic benefits
[00:07:54.04]
of cannabis and the risks.
[00:07:56.08]
Dr. Abrams and a select committee reviewed
[00:07:59.04]
over 10,000 studies.
[00:08:01.08]
They found only a small number
[00:08:03.09]
that were scientifically
strong enough to grade,
[00:08:06.04]
but it's the best evidence we have so far.
[00:08:09.06]
The most common conditions
for medical cannabis use
[00:08:12.08]
are pain, epilepsy, cancer, and PTSD.
[00:08:18.06]
We will look at the
evidence but, importantly,
[00:08:21.01]
we'll hear people's stories.
[00:08:25.03]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:08:39.06]
Eva Ceskava is a retired
Unitarian Minister.
[00:08:43.04]
She had severe back pain,
underwent three spinal surgeries
[00:08:47.04]
and still suffered.
[00:08:49.03]
She was taking a small dose of opioids.
[00:08:53.05]
- I was visiting friends and Toby said,
[00:08:58.05]
"Have you tried pot?"
[00:09:01.05]
And I said, "For pain?"
[00:09:02.07]
And he said, "Yeah, it's
supposed to help with that."
[00:09:05.03]
So, okay. I smoked a little
[00:09:10.06]
and my back felt better!
[00:09:12.04]
It didn't hurt as much.
[00:09:14.05]
But the cannabis really
takes the edge off.
[00:09:20.01]
The pain is always there.
[00:09:22.04]
But with the little bit of opioid I use
[00:09:28.00]
and then the little bit
of cannabis that I use,
[00:09:32.08]
it's bearable.
[00:09:35.01]
I don't feel like leaving the planet yet.
[00:09:40.01]
[chuckles]
[00:09:41.06]
And I enjoy the things I do.
[00:09:43.05]
I'm active in my church.
[00:09:45.02]
I'm a docent at the Indian
Pueblo Cultural Center.
[00:09:49.08]
And if I had to rely totally on opioids,
[00:09:53.02]
I wouldn't be able to do it.
[00:09:55.00]
You know, it requires some brains.
[00:09:59.02]
I still have brains with cannabis.
[00:10:02.05]
- And the cannabis, has it helped you?
[00:10:05.01]
- Yes sir.
- Okay.
[00:10:06.01]
- It sure has.
[00:10:07.08]
The opiates were not doing it
[00:10:11.00]
because they knock you out all day.
[00:10:13.05]
With this, I can pick and choose,
[00:10:16.02]
I can wait till the last minute.
[00:10:18.01]
I know it's only going to
last a certain amount of time
[00:10:20.08]
and I'm not worried about it.
[00:10:22.06]
- Well, I think, uh,
definitely you are going
[00:10:24.01]
to qualify for renewal.
[00:10:25.05]
You always do and this is
your fifth year, so I'm going
[00:10:28.02]
to go ahead and fill out
your paperwork for you.
[00:10:30.05]
- [Dave] Recent studies
have shown that in states
[00:10:32.08]
where medical cannabis is
legal and easily accessible
[00:10:36.01]
to patients, opiate-related
deaths have declined.
[00:10:40.07]
- I'm going to take a listen
[00:10:41.05]
to your heart real quick.
- Okay.
[00:10:42.08]
- [Dave] Dr. Anthony Reeve
noticed that when many
[00:10:45.00]
of his patients came to renew
their yearly cannabis cards,
[00:10:48.08]
their opiate use had decreased or stopped.
[00:10:51.07]
At the time, New Mexico had one
[00:10:53.04]
of the highest opioid
overdose rates in the country.
[00:10:56.08]
He was intrigued.
[00:10:58.02]
- We had a survey that
asked different questions,
[00:11:01.02]
like what's your pain
level before and after,
[00:11:04.02]
whether using other medications,
things of that nature.
[00:11:07.06]
And then, at that point, I started
[00:11:10.01]
to team up with Dr. Vigil.
[00:11:12.02]
- So we conducted the study,
essentially comparing patients
[00:11:16.03]
that were afflicted with
chronic pain conditions
[00:11:19.02]
and were given the opportunity to enroll
[00:11:21.06]
in a medical cannabis program
as compared to patients
[00:11:24.03]
that were given the same opportunity
[00:11:26.02]
but ultimately chose not to enroll.
[00:11:28.00]
And what we found is that those patients
[00:11:29.05]
that chose to enroll
ultimately, dramatically reduced
[00:11:32.04]
their opiate usage and, more than that,
[00:11:35.03]
multiple classes of
prescription medications.
[00:11:38.01]
- [Dave] Drs. Reeve and
Vigil were the first
[00:11:40.03]
to show a dramatic decrease in opioid use
[00:11:43.05]
among cannabis card holders.
[00:11:45.07]
Studies in other states have
now confirmed their findings.
[00:11:50.08]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:12:09.08]
- You probably know the numbers.
[00:12:11.00]
There's about 1% of the
population has epilepsy,
[00:12:14.04]
which is a large number, and
of that 1% of all the people
[00:12:17.04]
that have epilepsy, 30%
are not controlled--
[00:12:20.06]
and that's with all the latest
medication and so forth.
[00:12:24.03]
- Actually before I left
Children's Hospital,
[00:12:27.06]
they told me that I would have to have her
[00:12:30.03]
in a special wheelchair
because she would never be able
[00:12:32.04]
to lift up her head and she
would probably never talk.
[00:12:35.02]
She would never eat.
[00:12:36.04]
She would never crawl.
[00:12:38.04]
And she would never walk,
she would never do anything.
[00:12:40.08]
- I have...
- Say cheese!
[00:12:42.09]
- [Dave] Amylea is getting ready
[00:12:44.04]
to celebrate her second birthday.
[00:12:46.02]
She's made remarkable progress.
[00:12:49.06]
- [Camie] So, uh, Tess in on
a CBD-THC blend of cannabis.
[00:12:54.08]
- [Dave] Tess has a rare
chromosome abnormality
[00:12:58.00]
and has had constant seizures since birth.
[00:13:01.00]
- She would be asleep, you know.
[00:13:03.03]
I mean, she would be
living her life not aware
[00:13:06.01]
of her surroundings.
[00:13:08.07]
- [Dave] Neither Tess nor
Amylea has been diagnosed
[00:13:11.05]
with Dravet syndrome, the
severe seizure condition
[00:13:15.00]
that researchers studied.
[00:13:16.08]
But their seizures have
responded to cannabis,
[00:13:19.07]
both CBD and THC.
[00:13:23.05]
- She gets everything
through her feeding tube
[00:13:26.03]
which is a MIC-KEY.
[00:13:27.09]
So this is Tess's CBD/THC.
[00:13:31.00]
She gets this every day.
[00:13:32.07]
She gets 0.4 mls twice a
day, once in the morning
[00:13:36.05]
and once in the evening.
[00:13:38.07]
- Now once they've gone
through several medications
[00:13:40.07]
and the seizures are still continuing
[00:13:42.02]
and the family is interested
in trying medical cannabis,
[00:13:46.04]
then we have a discussion
[00:13:48.02]
about the parameters for trying it.
[00:13:52.06]
We have paperwork that
needs to be filled out
[00:13:54.04]
by myself, and I do that.
[00:13:56.08]
- [Dave] At the time, CBD
oil was only available
[00:13:59.08]
in Colorado, so Amylea
was airlifted to Denver.
[00:14:04.03]
- They signed her up for a clinical trial
[00:14:05.08]
at Children's Hospital and
she started taking cannabis
[00:14:08.06]
the following day.
[00:14:11.00]
She got almost instant relief.
[00:14:12.08]
We did have to switch
oils because the first one
[00:14:15.05]
we tried didn't work so well,
[00:14:16.08]
and then the second one is what
truly stopped her seizures.
[00:14:20.03]
- Obviously there's no FDA oversight yet,
[00:14:22.05]
so I don't know what's in that bottle
[00:14:23.09]
and I don't really know about dosing,
[00:14:26.02]
and I'll hopefully know
better in a few years
[00:14:28.07]
what seizure types medical
cannabis might be good for,
[00:14:32.08]
what specific side effects
or monitoring programs
[00:14:35.04]
we should have the kids on--
[00:14:36.05]
because we don't know that yet.
[00:14:38.04]
[dog barks]
[00:14:39.04]
- [Camie] Having the cannabis
is one of those things
[00:14:41.06]
that have afforded us to get her off some
[00:14:43.08]
of these medications that have
had horrible effects on her.
[00:14:48.06]
- But I think that when you
are looking at children,
[00:14:50.07]
you want to help children,
[00:14:53.03]
and we don't have other good choices.
[00:14:55.07]
It's certainly better
than some other options
[00:14:58.00]
that some people might try.
[00:15:00.06]
- [Dave] Now, the first
cannabis medication
[00:15:02.09]
for Dravet syndrome and
severe childhood epilepsy
[00:15:07.01]
has been approved for use by the FDA.
[00:15:10.00]
And the reason it's been OK'd
is because it's not THC--
[00:15:14.06]
it is pharmaceutical grade,
non-psychoactive CBD,
[00:15:18.09]
meeting precise dosage
and safety requirements.
[00:15:22.07]
- Adding the cannabis on top
[00:15:24.03]
of the pharmaceutical medications kind of
[00:15:26.00]
cut the side effects of
what the pharmaceuticals
[00:15:28.07]
were doing to her
[00:15:31.08]
and let her be a child, a baby.
[00:15:37.05]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:15:56.02]
- I think cannabis is
a very useful medicine
[00:15:58.07]
for symptom management
in patients with cancer.
[00:16:02.02]
It's the only anti-nausea drug
[00:16:04.01]
that can also increase appetite.
[00:16:06.04]
It's also useful for pain,
anxiety, depression, sleep.
[00:16:12.00]
My studies have demonstrated
that it augments the benefit,
[00:16:15.07]
potentially, of opiates,
[00:16:17.04]
and I've seen cancer patients
wean off of their opiates.
[00:16:21.06]
- Hi, Tom.
- Hello.
[00:16:22.06]
- [Woman] How are you?
[00:16:23.09]
- [Dave] Tom Dellaria is
a writer and filmmaker.
[00:16:26.09]
He'd felt fine, but his doctor
felt a mass in his abdomen.
[00:16:30.09]
It was a cancerous tumor.
[00:16:33.00]
- It was subsequently
removed and weighed 10 pounds
[00:16:38.08]
and was about a foot by
a foot by five inches,
[00:16:43.06]
kind of like a big fat gigantic pancake.
[00:16:48.05]
- [Dave] Lenny Maietta
and her husband Frank
[00:16:50.07]
are kinesiologists, movement therapists,
[00:16:53.07]
who help disabled people around the world.
[00:16:57.00]
- After a couple of very
short tests it was determined
[00:17:01.00]
I had a very large tumor,
[00:17:03.00]
and I was in surgery two days later.
[00:17:07.01]
- [Dave] Lenny was
diagnosed with a rare type
[00:17:09.03]
of ovarian cancer,
treated with chemotherapy.
[00:17:14.00]
Tom's tumor recurred about a year later.
[00:17:17.05]
- And after five hours of fishing around
[00:17:21.08]
it was determined that it was inoperable.
[00:17:27.02]
- I woke up one morning and thought,
[00:17:29.06]
"It's the chemo that's
killing me, not the cancer,"
[00:17:32.07]
and I stopped, um...
[00:17:36.02]
Yeah, I stopped.
[00:17:39.04]
And so, we figured out
how to make suppositories.
[00:17:42.09]
My dizziness left, my nauseous-ness left.
[00:17:46.06]
And I have now been doing a
gram and a half to two grams
[00:17:50.06]
of cannabis a day for
just about three years.
[00:17:55.07]
- [Dave] Tom knew that cannabis could help
[00:17:57.07]
with symptoms associated
with cancer and chemotherapy,
[00:18:01.04]
like nausea, vomiting,
loss of appetite and pain.
[00:18:05.04]
- My surgeon connected
me with the oncologist.
[00:18:10.09]
I asked him if he had...
[00:18:12.07]
If he was familiar with
CBD, and he said, "Yes."
[00:18:18.02]
And I said, "Well, do you
have an opinion about it?"
[00:18:22.03]
And he said, "Well, I
should. I take it every day."
[00:18:27.00]
- [Dave] Tom is enrolled
in a clinical trial
[00:18:29.01]
at the University of New
Mexico Cancer Center.
[00:18:31.07]
He's getting two drugs
to target his tumor.
[00:18:34.07]
He's realistic about
his choices and chances.
[00:18:38.07]
- Might it help shrink
my tumor and, if not,
[00:18:42.05]
while I'm waiting and the chemo
[00:18:45.02]
or immunotherapy is working can I not
[00:18:50.09]
puke and feel terrible all the time?
[00:18:55.06]
So that's what I was
hoping to get from it.
[00:19:00.00]
- It's not just that
my tumors get smaller,
[00:19:01.09]
it's that I get healthier every day.
[00:19:04.02]
All of my labs get better continuously.
[00:19:07.08]
And I'm able to do my life, I'm sure,
[00:19:11.07]
because of the cannabis.
[00:19:12.08]
Without it, I'm sure I would be sick.
[00:19:15.08]
- [Dave] Lenny consults
regularly with her oncologist,
[00:19:18.03]
and continues taking cannabis
[00:19:20.00]
along with intermittent chemotherapy.
[00:19:24.01]
Unfortunately, thousands of
people rely on cannabis alone
[00:19:27.06]
to treat their cancers,
on very scanty evidence.
[00:19:31.06]
- The plural of anecdote is
not evidence, is what we say.
[00:19:35.04]
True, oncologists are the
most demanding of evidence
[00:19:38.05]
because we treat a very serious disease
[00:19:40.09]
and we use very potent medicines.
[00:19:44.02]
- [Dave] There is evidence
that concentrations
[00:19:46.00]
of cannabis can kill certain cancer cells,
[00:19:49.05]
but only in animal
models in the laboratory.
[00:19:52.06]
Much of the animal research
is being done in Spain
[00:19:55.04]
and other countries, and it is promising.
[00:19:58.05]
- You know, I am not
saying that the evidence
[00:20:01.03]
in the test tube is not impressive.
[00:20:04.09]
Does that translate into having an effect
[00:20:07.00]
in human brain tumors, or
human tumors of any kind?
[00:20:11.04]
We don't know.
[00:20:13.08]
- [Dave] Here's the reality.
[00:20:15.00]
Surgery, radiation and
chemotherapy have proven effective
[00:20:18.04]
for many cancers.
[00:20:20.02]
Cannabis can help with symptoms,
[00:20:22.03]
but its potential
anti-cancer effect in people
[00:20:25.01]
is a long way from being studied.
[00:20:28.07]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:20:40.06]
- It's done really well
outside in our weather.
[00:20:45.00]
Very relaxing cerebral high.
[00:20:49.08]
Very good for evening time
when I'm trying to just relax
[00:20:52.03]
and go to sleep or watch
a movie with my family.
[00:20:57.02]
- [Dave] Matthew Eisenhower,
a marine staff sergeant,
[00:21:00.03]
served five tours of duty
in Afghanistan and Iraq.
[00:21:04.00]
He has PTSD, post-traumatic
stress disorder.
[00:21:08.04]
Over the centuries and the wars,
[00:21:10.04]
it's been called soldier's heart,
[00:21:12.07]
shell-shock, and combat fatigue.
[00:21:16.01]
- My heart was racing
[00:21:18.02]
and I've never felt this
feeling before of anxiety
[00:21:21.07]
or panic, and it confused me tremendously.
[00:21:26.02]
And I had to hide it
throughout my military career
[00:21:29.05]
because it was almost like a hindrance
[00:21:31.08]
to my performance at times.
[00:21:33.06]
- I had several assassination
attempts on my life
[00:21:38.04]
while I was in the Black Panther Party.
[00:21:41.03]
- [Dave] Aaron Dixon has
always been an activist.
[00:21:44.00]
After leaving the Black Panther Party,
[00:21:46.04]
he wrote a book about his experiences.
[00:21:48.06]
He's even run for Congress.
[00:21:50.06]
- You know, we always had to have guns.
[00:21:52.08]
The guns were to protect
ourselves from the police and FBI
[00:21:57.08]
and whoever else our
enemies might have been.
[00:22:02.01]
But after I left the party
and I started raising my kids,
[00:22:06.08]
I realized I had
post-traumatic stress syndrome
[00:22:11.00]
and I had a lot of anger, um...
[00:22:16.03]
...you know, built up inside of me.
[00:22:19.06]
- [Dave] Josh Willis developed
PTSD after he was arrested
[00:22:23.00]
and beaten by police.
[00:22:25.00]
- To make a long story short,
they took me to a field,
[00:22:27.06]
hogtied me, beat me severely,
[00:22:31.04]
threw me back and forth
to their coworkers.
[00:22:34.07]
- [Dave] After an hour
he was finally taken
[00:22:36.05]
to an emergency room.
[00:22:37.07]
- They're pulling teeth out,
they're pulling rocks out
[00:22:40.09]
of my body for months after that.
[00:22:43.09]
- [Dave] He did jail time.
[00:22:45.00]
But in the end, it was a
case of mistaken identity.
[00:22:50.05]
- It was easy for me to
self-medicate in the military,
[00:22:52.05]
just to drink a lot of alcohol
and drown that anxiety.
[00:22:58.05]
It was very easy to use benzos
like Xanax and Temazepam
[00:23:04.01]
and Lorazepam to give you
that quick release of panic.
[00:23:09.02]
- Sometimes I've had a smell
or see a security guard,
[00:23:12.01]
and I'll just start...
[00:23:14.05]
I can't talk, I just start...
[00:23:18.00]
I don't know how to explain it.
[00:23:19.03]
It's just gets real bad, I'm sorry.
[00:23:22.09]
[clears throat]
[00:23:24.01]
- Death didn't seem like a big deal to me,
[00:23:26.03]
or the aspect of suicide didn't
seem like it was a big deal.
[00:23:32.02]
But I realized eventually
that it was just a temporary--
[00:23:38.00]
I mean, it was a permanent
fix to a temporary problem.
[00:23:42.04]
- If I did not have cannabis, you know,
[00:23:45.06]
to help me through the
years, um, you know,
[00:23:51.01]
things would have been
very difficult for me.
[00:23:54.06]
- And then, um, talking to
other vets, I've found cannabis,
[00:24:00.08]
and I thought, "Hey, what--
[00:24:02.03]
give it a try."
[00:24:04.01]
And I did, and it was a...
[00:24:08.08]
It was a miracle, it changed my life.
[00:24:11.00]
- For the vast majority of
people who use cannabis,
[00:24:13.05]
we don't see large negative
problems resulting.
[00:24:18.04]
So, only about 10% of
people who use cannabis
[00:24:21.08]
with any regularity will
develop an addiction to it
[00:24:24.02]
or cannabis use disorder,
leaving 90% of people
[00:24:28.02]
not having particularly bad outcomes.
[00:24:31.00]
- I would say easily 90%
[00:24:33.00]
of my clients report dramatic benefit
[00:24:36.02]
in their functioning and symptoms.
[00:24:38.02]
Of my patients on medications,
[00:24:40.04]
and this is just a ballpark figure,
[00:24:41.08]
I'd say maybe at least
half of them are able
[00:24:43.06]
to completely stop the medication
[00:24:45.07]
and maybe another quarter are able
[00:24:47.07]
to start cutting them down.
[00:24:50.04]
- [Dave] There are genuine
concerns about cannabis use
[00:24:53.02]
in people with psychiatric
illnesses like schizophrenia,
[00:24:56.06]
bipolar disorder and long-term depression.
[00:24:59.03]
But thousands of veterans
and others with PTSD
[00:25:02.07]
have found it helps.
[00:25:05.03]
- Ability to get a whole new set of pipes
[00:25:07.01]
to finish out the rest of the study.
[00:25:09.03]
- [Dave] Dr. Sue Sisley was
a psychiatrist on the faculty
[00:25:12.07]
of the University of Arizona
[00:25:14.07]
and cared for many veterans with PTSD.
[00:25:18.03]
- They started reluctantly
disclosing to me
[00:25:21.02]
that they were using
cannabis, and I say reluctant
[00:25:24.03]
because they knew how conservative I was.
[00:25:27.05]
You know, I'm a life-long Republican
[00:25:28.09]
who never used cannabis my whole life.
[00:25:32.05]
Yes, sir. How are you, Lorenzo?
[00:25:35.00]
Please, have a seat here.
- Thank you.
[00:25:37.00]
- [Dave] The more vets she saw,
[00:25:38.03]
the more she realized
cannabis was helping.
[00:25:40.09]
And when they couldn't
get it, they got worse.
[00:25:44.01]
- A lot of them would become
completely housebound,
[00:25:47.04]
and then with the use of cannabis,
[00:25:49.02]
the families would report
that not only were they able
[00:25:52.03]
to be more interactive but they were able
[00:25:55.07]
to often hold down a job
again for the first time.
[00:25:59.03]
- [Dave] Not only that.
[00:26:00.02]
Dr. Sisley realized that many
vets were no longer having
[00:26:03.04]
to use more addictive medications.
[00:26:06.07]
Because there was so little research,
[00:26:08.07]
she decided to do a
scientifically rigorous study.
[00:26:12.04]
It took seven years to
get federal approval,
[00:26:15.03]
which meant the cannabis would come
[00:26:17.04]
from the so-called government farm
[00:26:19.04]
at the University of
Mississippi-- the only facility
[00:26:22.05]
in America licensed to
grow cannabis for research.
[00:26:26.04]
And it finally came, FedEx.
[00:26:30.00]
- This is the whole thing.
[00:26:31.06]
Look at that!
[00:26:32.05]
- Look important.
- Yeah, we...
[00:26:33.03]
- Is this, like, your
first shipment, or...?
[00:26:34.08]
- Yes, first shipment ever.
- Yeah.
[00:26:36.08]
- Four kilos of cannabis in there.
[00:26:39.04]
- [Dave] Dr. Sisley's study is designed
[00:26:41.04]
to evaluate the participants'
response to smoked cannabis,
[00:26:45.06]
comparing the effects of plants
with high THC concentration,
[00:26:49.09]
high CBD, an equal ratio
of both, and placebo.
[00:26:55.05]
- I can tell you in general
that the veterans here seem
[00:26:59.01]
to be responding favorably
to the study drug,
[00:27:02.02]
but we've had patients with side effects,
[00:27:04.04]
we've had a few adverse events.
[00:27:06.05]
You know, it's not a perfect drug,
[00:27:09.05]
and none of the drugs are on the market.
[00:27:12.04]
- [Dave] Dr. Sisley, a
gifted teacher and honored
[00:27:15.03]
for her work in community mental health,
[00:27:17.07]
was fired by the University of Arizona
[00:27:20.03]
after she began the study.
[00:27:23.03]
[lively instrumental music]
[00:27:39.05]
- First I'm going to dictate
a report for the State.
[00:27:42.01]
- [Dave] Health practitioners
in the United States
[00:27:44.03]
cannot legally prescribe cannabis.
[00:27:46.07]
Their role is to certify that
patients have one or more
[00:27:50.05]
of the qualifying medical conditions,
[00:27:53.00]
and they may recommend it be tried.
[00:27:55.07]
Different states have
their own application,
[00:27:58.00]
licensing and reporting requirements.
[00:28:01.04]
- Edibles are really good for maintenance.
[00:28:04.03]
- [Dave] The patients'
next stop is a dispensary,
[00:28:06.07]
where your consultant is not
a pharmacist but a bud-tender.
[00:28:10.05]
- With edibles it's pretty much...
[00:28:12.00]
We can replicate everything.
[00:28:14.09]
- [Dave] The new drugstore in
town only sells one medicine.
[00:28:18.00]
- ...half an hour to two hours.
[00:28:19.00]
- It markets a mixed bag,
[00:28:20.02]
or baggie, of diverse plant genetics
[00:28:22.09]
with decidedly unconventional names.
[00:28:26.00]
[mellow piano music]
[00:28:33.05]
- [Dave] They have different percentages
[00:28:35.04]
and ratios of THC, CBD
and other cannabinoids.
[00:28:40.00]
How are folks to know what works for what?
[00:28:43.02]
- Even-- so I certify
people for medical cannabis,
[00:28:46.03]
if someone says to me,
"What strain should I use?"
[00:28:48.03]
I have to tell them, you
know, there are hundreds
[00:28:49.07]
of strains. I don't know. I can't say,
[00:28:52.08]
"You've got these symptoms,
there's this strain."
[00:28:54.03]
So what's happening is
exactly as you're saying,
[00:28:56.08]
that the main source of
information are the people working
[00:29:00.02]
in the dispensaries.
[00:29:01.05]
- You know, I generally tell people,
[00:29:03.02]
and it's become the mantra of
the cannabis medicine world,
[00:29:05.09]
is "Start low and go slow,"
[00:29:09.03]
especially for people that
have no prior experience
[00:29:12.04]
or exposure to cannabis products.
[00:29:14.06]
I think, you know, the
better part of valor is
[00:29:16.09]
to be conservative and
see what you can tolerate.
[00:29:20.06]
- I also tell people, you know,
[00:29:21.08]
"If you've been on pain
medicine, chances are
[00:29:24.06]
you've been getting high."
[00:29:26.00]
- [Dave] The problem is, because
[00:29:27.05]
of government research restrictions,
[00:29:29.03]
there is mainly anecdotal
evidence about what combinations
[00:29:32.07]
and dosages work best for
a particular condition.
[00:29:36.01]
It amounts to trial and error.
[00:29:39.00]
But some people are
trying to figure it out.
[00:29:41.06]
- If I was to put into one
sentence what my goal is
[00:29:45.09]
in this industry, it's to
solve the dosing conundrum.
[00:29:49.04]
That is what I focus all of
my energy on, is the dosing.
[00:29:53.04]
- [Dave] In a different life,
Mara Gordon was an engineer,
[00:29:56.04]
helping large companies
streamline production.
[00:29:59.06]
Now she's a medical cannabis entrepreneur,
[00:30:02.09]
an international lecturer, and researcher.
[00:30:06.09]
- We have been collecting all this data,
[00:30:08.02]
about 300 data points on
each patient going in,
[00:30:11.01]
plus pretty extensive
questions that we ask
[00:30:14.06]
on their previous-present cannabis use
[00:30:17.06]
and what their objectives are with it,
[00:30:19.03]
and then make a starting
point recommendation for them
[00:30:22.08]
as to what we believe will be
a targeted therapeutic dose.
[00:30:26.07]
- [Dave] In California, patients
in Mara's study have access
[00:30:30.03]
to cannabis with THC
and CBD concentrations
[00:30:34.04]
almost three times higher
than the government weed
[00:30:37.03]
from that Mississippi farm.
[00:30:40.03]
- Other countries have
been more open-minded.
[00:30:42.05]
There's a lot of excellent
research coming out of Israel
[00:30:45.00]
and of course various European
countries and even Canada.
[00:30:48.02]
But the bias in the medical establishment
[00:30:51.08]
in the United States is, if
the study wasn't done in the US
[00:30:53.09]
it's not as good.
[00:30:55.02]
- [Anthony] And no pain in the throat?
[00:30:57.01]
- [Dave] No matter where
the studies are done,
[00:30:59.00]
most physicians don't
know much about cannabis--
[00:31:02.04]
some are skeptical or opposed
[00:31:04.04]
and many are afraid to recommend it.
[00:31:07.04]
- Well, speaking for
myself, I learned nothing
[00:31:09.03]
about cannabis in medical
school or in residency,
[00:31:12.02]
and really even throughout practice.
[00:31:14.08]
So I think the general...
[00:31:16.02]
If I'm any example, I think the
general physician population
[00:31:20.01]
knows very, very little about cannabis.
[00:31:23.07]
- The patient feedback loop
to doctors is complicated
[00:31:27.04]
because there's a lot of doctors
[00:31:28.08]
who won't write medical
cannabis recommendations.
[00:31:31.04]
So our patients frequently
are going to a cannabis clinic
[00:31:35.00]
to get their recommendation,
[00:31:36.09]
and their actual regular
doctor may not even know
[00:31:40.00]
that they are consuming cannabis.
[00:31:42.04]
- [Dave] Lack of physician knowledge
[00:31:43.08]
is not the only problem.
[00:31:45.02]
Cannabis has rearranged
all health communication.
[00:31:48.07]
Normally, a practitioner
writes a prescription
[00:31:51.02]
for a condition, a pharmacist
fills it with a precise dose,
[00:31:55.01]
the patient reports if it works or not,
[00:31:57.03]
and it's all recorded in a chart.
[00:31:59.05]
But since physicians can't
legally write a prescription
[00:32:02.07]
for cannabis as they
would for other medicines,
[00:32:05.01]
pharmacists are out of the loop
[00:32:06.07]
and many practitioners are as well.
[00:32:08.09]
They're replaced by bud-tenders.
[00:32:12.00]
- I think that we need to have
a certification system put
[00:32:16.00]
in case, uh, in place, where,
if you are going to be working
[00:32:19.05]
on these environments, that you've had
[00:32:20.08]
at least minimum levels of education,
[00:32:23.03]
understanding some of
just the basic things,
[00:32:25.04]
understand plant medicine,
[00:32:26.06]
understand, certainly, the
endocannabinoid system.
[00:32:29.09]
- I think those bud-tenders
out there on the front line,
[00:32:33.08]
having experience
interacting back and forth
[00:32:36.09]
with people using cannabis
for medicinal purposes,
[00:32:40.07]
probably are those best informed
[00:32:43.06]
to know what works and what doesn't.
[00:32:45.07]
- [Dave] The National
Academy of Sciences' report
[00:32:48.01]
on cannabis-as-medicine
[00:32:50.00]
reviewed the best available
evidence, pro and con,
[00:32:53.05]
for common medical conditions.
[00:32:55.05]
You can read it.
[00:32:56.03]
It's available online.
[00:32:58.09]
- I was told that I'd
never walk unassisted again
[00:33:00.07]
after my accident, um, and
with cannabis treatment
[00:33:04.00]
I'm getting feeling back in my nerves.
[00:33:07.03]
- [Dave] People have been telling stories
[00:33:08.08]
about cannabis for 3,000 years.
[00:33:11.04]
But stories, anecdotes,
only become evidence
[00:33:15.00]
with good science, research,
[00:33:17.01]
and that's the major
recommendation of the NAS report--
[00:33:20.06]
getting rid of prohibitive
barriers so that research
[00:33:24.05]
and clinical trials can begin
[00:33:26.09]
and, hopefully, people's
health will benefit.
[00:33:30.02]
- I think that it's important
for both investigators
[00:33:33.05]
as well as providers and
patients to fully understand
[00:33:36.05]
that we're dealing with
something that's very different
[00:33:38.08]
than uniform prescription medications.
[00:33:42.00]
That is that cannabis is always variable
[00:33:43.09]
from plant to plant.
[00:33:45.01]
And what that means is
it requires patients
[00:33:47.03]
to take an active management
in their treatment decisions
[00:33:51.04]
and essentially engage in a
little bit of trial and error.
[00:33:54.05]
And that will probably always be the state
[00:33:57.02]
in which we are able to utilize
[00:33:58.09]
the medicinal effects of cannabis.
[00:34:02.05]
[gentle piano music]
[00:34:09.01]
- I don't understand how it can be allowed
[00:34:13.09]
that politics can reign
[00:34:18.07]
over medical practice.
[00:34:20.08]
You know, physicians have taken
an oath to maintain healing.
[00:34:26.08]
And anytime that they find a product
[00:34:32.05]
that improves health
[00:34:35.02]
and longevity over time,
[00:34:39.02]
that they're not allowed
[00:34:41.01]
to use it, it is just...
[00:34:43.06]
It's really, from my perspective, a sin.
[00:34:48.01]
[jaunty piano music]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 35 minutes
Date: 2019
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 6 - 12, College, Adults
Color/BW:
Closed Captioning: Available
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