http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stori ... 524&EDATE=Marijuana: Illegal Drug or Medical Treatment: Airs on THE MONTEL WILLIAMS SHOW: Tuesday, September 21, 2004
NEW YORK, Sept. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- On the Tuesday, September 21, 2004 episode of THE MONTEL WILLIAMS SHOW, Montel Williams presents a very personal appeal for the legalization of medical marijuana. Montel publicly announces that he uses marijuana to ease the debilitating pain of Multiple Sclerosis (MS). He is joined on the show by several guests who use medical marijuana to aid their illnesses, and experts who offer pros and cons on the topic of legalizing marijuana for medicinal purposes.
On the show, Irvin Rosenfeld, a stockbroker from Lauderhill, FL, tells Montel that he has been receiving medical marijuana from the government for over 20 years as part of a federally funded program. He suffers from a rare condition called Multiple Congenital Cartilaginous Exostosis and says he has been enrolled with 12 others in a compassionate-care program that allows treatment with government-grown marijuana from The University of Mississippi. Though President Bush ended the program in 1992, Rosenfeld still receives medical marijuana on a monthly basis from the government.
Don Murphy, Maryland's former Republican State Delegate, says he "voted for higher penalties for large amounts of marijuana and other drugs." But then, he says, his father died of cancer, and he learned too late of the value of medical marijuana. According to Murphy, "My father died in 1997 of cancer, and I didn't even know marijuana's medicinal value for him." He says he "didn't try to get it." But, Murphy continues, "I can tell you one thing, elected or not, I would have (tried to get medical marijuana for his father to ease his pain), and I defy anyone in this audience or anyone else to say they wouldn't do the same thing."
The opposing viewpoint is stated by Dr. Andrea Barthwell, MD, former White House Office of National Drug Control Policy's Deputy Director for Demand Reduction, who says to Montel, "The problem with trying to bring medications to the marketplace through a popular vote ... is setting modern medicine back to the turn of the century." Barthwell continues by saying, "We developed a process through which we would evaluate botanicals, biologicals, even a molecule that we found in a lab, and would manipulate that in a way to increase its efficacy, reduce its side effect, and bring it to the people in a way that protected the public health." She claims that legalizing marijuana at this point in time, compares to "snake oil salesmen handing out medication from the back of a stagecoach."
Montel passionately rebuts her statement, referring to the government funded medical marijuana program that Rosenfeld openly discusses on the show. Williams exclaims, "Talk to me about stagecoaches. Tell me about the stagecoach from Washington D.C. that delivers this to a pharmacy every single week!"
To which Dr. Barthwell replies, "Well, there are some exceptions, and there are other patients that could get it through exception, but what we know is that ... independent scientists who determine medicine in this country ... determined that there was potential for medication development for marijuana, but that the research should follow the same scientific principles that we follow for all other medication development."
To which Williams responds, "For 20 years in a row there's been research garnered by the US government. You can research this guy (Irvin Rosenfeld)!"
Other guests on the show include: A mother and grandmother of an eight-year-old boy from Rocklin, CA, who claim his aggressive behavior was initially treated by over 16 psychotropic drugs with no success, until they discovered medical marijuana. And a woman from Oakland, CA, whose body is unable to synthesize traditional medication and can only function with regular intake of medical marijuana.
Also appearing on the show are: Dr. Donald Abrams, MD, Professor of Clinical Medicine at the University of California/San Francisco; Rob Kampia, Executive Director of the Marijuana Policy Project; and Roger Curtiss, addiction counselor and director of alcohol and drug services of Anaconda/Deer Lodge, an outpatient treatment facility in Montana.
THE MONTEL WILLIAMS SHOW is a Mountain Movers production in association with Paramount Domestic Television. Montel Williams and Diane Rappoport are executive producers.
Paramount Domestic Television is part of the Viacom Entertainment Group, which includes the Paramount Motion Picture Group, Paramount Television Production, Paramount Worldwide Television Distribution, Simon & Schuster and Paramount Enterprises (which is comprised of Paramount Parks, Famous Players Inc., Paramount's interest in United Cinemas International, Famous Music Publishing, Consumer Products and Paramount Digital Entertainment).
Viacom Entertainment Group is part of the entertainment operations of Viacom Inc.
Paramount Television Group is part of the entertainment operations of Viacom Inc. (NYSE: VIA)
SOURCE Paramount Domestic Television
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