Home Secretary launches review of medicinal use of cannabis

Home Secretary Sajid Javid has announced a review of the medicinal use of cannabis which could lead to patients in the UK being prescribed drugs derived from the banned plant.
Charlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy CaldwellCharlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy Caldwell
Charlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy Caldwell

Mr Javid announced the move in a statement to the House of Commons in the wake of a series of appeals from parents who want their children to be able to access medications which can alleviate epilepsy and other illnesses.

The Home Secretary announced that he had authorised a licence to be issued on Tuesday for six-year-old Alfie Dingley, after his mother said she had been waiting three months for Prime Minister Theresa May to fulfil a personal assurance that he would be allowed to receive cannabis oil.

Speaking to the House of Commons, Mr Javid stressed that the class B drug would remain banned for recreational use.

Charlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy CaldwellCharlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy Caldwell
Charlotte Caldwell, mother of Billy Caldwell

Mr Javid told MPs that the review would be held in two parts. The first, led by chief medical officer Sally Davies, will make recommendations on which cannabis-based medicines might offer patients real medical and therapeutic benefits.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs will consider in the second part of the review whether changes should be made to the classification of these products on an assessment of "the balance of harms and public health needs".

"If the review identifies significant medical benefits, then we do intend to reschedule," Mr Javid told MPs.

"We have seen in recent months that there is a pressing need to allow those who might benefit from cannabis-based medicines to access them."

Hannah Deacon, the mother of six-year-old Alfie Dingley, who has been issued a special licence to treat his epilepsy with cannabis oil, in central london, after Home Secretary Sajid Javid announced a review of the medicinal use of cannabis which could lead to patients in the UK being prescribed drugs derived from the banned plant.Hannah Deacon, the mother of six-year-old Alfie Dingley, who has been issued a special licence to treat his epilepsy with cannabis oil, in central london, after Home Secretary Sajid Javid announced a review of the medicinal use of cannabis which could lead to patients in the UK being prescribed drugs derived from the banned plant.
Hannah Deacon, the mother of six-year-old Alfie Dingley, who has been issued a special licence to treat his epilepsy with cannabis oil, in central london, after Home Secretary Sajid Javid announced a review of the medicinal use of cannabis which could lead to patients in the UK being prescribed drugs derived from the banned plant.

Mr Javid said that since becoming Home Secretary in April, it had become clear to him that the current legal position on medicinal cannabis was "not satisfactory for the parents, not satisfactory for the doctors, and not satisfactory for me".

But he insisted: "This step is in no way a first step to the legalisation of cannabis for recreational use.

"This Government has absolutely no plans to legalise cannabis and the penalties for unauthorised supply and possession will remain unchanged."

Alfie's mother said she had been "overwhelmed" by the Home Secretary's announcement and voiced hope it would be easier to access to get cannabis medication in the future, saying it would be "madness" for sufferers to miss out.

Hannah Deacon said she also wanted the Government to make it easier to do research into the medical properties of the plant, saying: "Hopefully we will have a more forward thinking way of doing things in this country and medicinal cannabis will hopefully, in five or 10 years time, be the norm.

"That is what I would want, because I would not want any other child to go through what my son has."

The announcement of the review came just days after Mr Javid intervened to permit the use of cannabis oil to treat severely epileptic 12-year-old Billy Caldwell, who had been admitted to hospital with seizures after supplies his mother had brought from Canada were confiscated at Heathrow.

Billy's mother Charlotte described it as "amazing news" which she "applauded".

She said: "Today, a few moments ago in the House of Commons, the government commissioned a full review of medicinal cannabis.

"While clearly largely positive, we still want to hear the detail from the mouths of the Home Secretary and the Health Secretary who was sitting next to him when he made the statement.

"At every stage of this campaign we have mentioned making history and we have mentioned it because it is commonsense.

"The power of the mothers and fathers of sick children has bust the political process wide open and it is on the verge of changing thousands of lives by bringing cannabis laws in line with many other countries.

"We are on the threshold of the next chapter of the history book."

Ms Caldwell said she wanted to meet with both the Home and Health Secretaries.

She said that in contrast to a week ago when she was still fighting for Billy to be treated with medicininal cannabis, a new meeting would be to "thank them for seeing and hearing sense and joining us in creating history in the United Kingdom."

Billy's case provoked widespread calls for a change in the law, with former Conservative leader Lord Hague urging ministers to consider full legalisation of the drug.

Writing in the Daily Telegraph, the Conservative peer - who led the party from 1997-2001 and was foreign secretary from 2010-14 - said the war on cannabis had been "comprehensively and irreversibly lost" and it was time to consider legalising the substance for recreational as well as medicinal use.

But he was swiftly slapped down by the Home Office, which said: "Any debate within government about the medicinal and therapeutic benefits of cannabis-based medicines does not extend to any review regarding the classification of cannabis and the penalties for the illicit possession, cultivation and trafficking of cannabis will remain the same."

Mr Javid told MPs he had the "utmost sympathy" for the families of children like Billy and Alfie, who have travelled abroad to obtain cannabis-based treatments banned in the UK.

"As a father, I know there is nothing worse than seeing your child suffer," he said. "You would do anything to take away their pain.

"That is why I have the utmost sympathy for Billy Caldwell, Alfie Dingley and many others like them and for their parents, who have been under unimaginable stress and strain.

"I know that they are following a gut parental instinct to do whatever is in their power to try to alleviate the suffering of their child.

"I will do everything in my power to make sure that we have a system that works, so that these children and these parents can get access to the best possible medical treatment."

In his Telegraph article, Lord Hague said the case of Billy Caldwell had shown the law around cannabis to be "inappropriate, ineffective and utterly out of date".

Licensing medicinal cannabis would be a step forward, but the Government should also consider legalising the drug, as Canada is on the verge of doing, he said.

Proposals being considered by the Canadian parliament would establish a legal market with licensed stores selling cannabis of regulated strength, with a strict prohibition on sales to teenagers, he said.

"If this works, it sounds more sensible than the current position," said Lord Hague.

But NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens urged caution.

"I think it's very important as a country that we don't confuse this debate around specifically prescribable products for certain medical conditions with a much more generalised debate around the decriminalisation or legalisation of marijuana, without at the same time reminding ourselves that there are some genuine health risks there," Mr Stevens told a conference in London.

"In those countries where marijuana has been decriminalised, often young people, teenagers, come to think of smoking marijuana as safe. Whereas let's be clear, actually it isn't."

He warned of the risks of addiction to cannabis and long-term psychiatric problems such as depression and psychosis, as well as possible damage to lungs.

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