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Posts with tag illegal
Posted Oct 16th 2006 12:33PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Chemotherapy, All Cancers, Politics, Services, Smoking, Daily news

Medical marijuana advocate Ed Rosenthal has been indicted again by a federal grand jury on a number of counts including conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana; money laundering and filing false tax returns related to a marijuana operation.
This is not the first time Rosenthal has been brought up on charges involving medical marijuana activities. Three years ago, he was convicted for cultivating marijuana for a city of Oakland medical marijuana program. An appeals court overturned the conviction this past April, citing jury misconduct, but it upheld federal powers to charge marijuana growers.
The
Ask Ed columnist for High Times magazine Rosenthal, 61, known as the
Guru of Ganja and author of marijuana cultivation books, is quoted as saying, "What they're trying to show is that they can close down anybody, a legitimate club, a legitimate provider who's sanctioned by the city. They're trying to stop patients from getting their medicine."
Other medical marijuana-related posts include:
Medical use of marijuana on a doctor's recommendation is legal in a number of states but prohibited by federal law.
Posted Aug 31st 2006 8:30AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Drug, Prevention, Products, Daily news

Prescription drugs purchased online from Canadian pharmacies were intercepted before they reached the US, and after preliminary laboratory tests were found to be counterfeit. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
is warning consumers who may have obtained prescription drugs from Mediplan Prescription Plus Pharmacy or Mediplan Global Health in Manitoba, Canada not to take the medication as it may not be safe.
The drugs in question are Lipitor, Diovan, Actonel, Nexium, Hyzaar, Ezetrol or Zetia, Crestor, Celebrex, Arimidex, and Propecia. Most of the drugs are prescribed for cholesterol disorders and high blood pressure; Actonel for osteoporosis in postmenopausal women; Nexium for gastroesophageal reflux disease; Celebrex for arthritis-related pain; Propecia for male-pattern baldness and Arimidex is a breast cancer chemoprevention medication.
Interestingly, the FDA conducted an investigation last year and discovered that nearly half of the imported drugs they confiscated from four selected countries were shipped to fill orders that consumers believed they were placing with Canadian pharmacies. The drugs did not come from Canada. According to the FDA, 85 percent actually came from 27 other countries around the globe. Buyer beware.
Posted Aug 13th 2006 1:23PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Drug

Maybe I have been weaving my way through the web for too many years that shades my perspective cynical and jaded but there are few internet destinations I trust outright. Certainly not when it comes to purchasing drugs. Questions of purity, reliability of ingredients and quality immediately come to mind. Equally at issue is the folly of self diagnosis and self prescribing medications for self described illness or malady.
UK doctors have reported that a woman, who diagnosed herself with chronic fatigue syndrome and, on the advice of a neighbor, bought oral steroids from an online pharmacy in Thailand, is going blind as a result of the drugs she took.
Continue reading Buying drugs online risky business
Posted Jun 10th 2006 10:38PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Alternative Therapies, Drug, Chemotherapy, All Cancers, Politics, Smoking, Celebrity news

When
Montel Williams testified before the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee in favor of medical marijuana for chronically ill patients, he referred to himself as
a poster child for pot. Williams, who hosts a television talk show, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis almost a decade ago.
MS can cause debilitating pain. For those who might be unaware, let me share with you that Williams does not exaggerate. My sister-in-law suffered from MS all of her adult life, before losing her life to MS at the age of 40, and I will tell you first-hand, there is suffering. When I think of all the life that MS stole from her, and all that she endured, I feel frustration towards anyone who would have denied her the best quality of life available. I am fed up with the lack of compassion of those who would deny anyone suffering from chronic or life-threatening disease the best quality of life available to them. For Williams, it is medical marijuana that offers him the best quality of life possible.
Continue reading Montel Williams: poster child for pot
Posted Jun 10th 2006 10:22AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Drug, All Cancers, Daily news

The world is a dangerous place for the trusting and the innocent -- which is probably one of the reasons we have some of the laws we do to protect everyone.
Still, even with laws in place, it seems we are not all that safe. Frankly, I am disturbed by what I learned that I did not know about prescription drugs being dispensed in this country and the estimated number of those prescriptions that are counterfeit drugs. Drugs of ineffective strength. Drugs made with unknown chemicals. Drugs switched with less expensive drugs meant for another medical condition. Basically -- the wrong drugs.
Continue reading Fake drugs: counterfeit drugs sold as prescription drugs
Posted Jun 7th 2006 2:22PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Prevention, Nutrition, Cancer prevention foods, Vitamins and nutrients

New Zealand health authorities are investigating what they feel to be extravagant health claims by companies trying to sell
goji juice as a cure for cancer. In New Zealand, that kind of health claim is illegal. That kind of health claim is illegal in the United States as well.
There might be a single magical berry that can cure cancer, but without rigorous scientific study, who can say for sure? Certainly not the manufacturers of goji juice, or those who seek to profit from the sale of goji juice. Not without scientific proof.
I am inclined to believe it is healthy for you, and does provide antioxidants that do have cancer prevention value, because it is a berry. Most berries have been shown to offer cancer prevention in supplying the body with vital nutrients essential to good health. But that is far cry from believing goji juice is a cure for cancer.
Common sense would keep us from buying into flamboyant claims that can give someone diagnosed with cancer false hope. A cancer diagnosis can create intense levels of fear and sometimes, a willingness to set aside normal and sensible judgment. Most of the nutritional experts are suggesting that given the current price of a goji juice drink, similar berries, fruits and vegetables might be more cost effective in getting the same antioxidant and nutrition value.
Posted May 23rd 2006 6:36PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Alternative Therapies, Drug, Chemotherapy, Lung Cancer, Prevention, Politics, Smoking

There are as many carcinogens in marijuana as there are in tobacco, but researchers were surprised to find that people who
smoke marijuana are not at an increased risk for developing lung cancer. In fact, marijuana smokers might be receiving a weak level of cancer prevention. People who smoke cigarettes are definitely at a greater risk for developing cancer as a result of smoking, and the more they smoke tobacco, the greater the risk for cancer. But pot smokers do not seem to share the same risk.
According to researchers, and the research, even very heavy, long-term marijuana users who had smoked more than 22,000 joints over a lifetime seemed to have no greater risk than infrequent marijuana users or those who never smoked.
Wondering why? Researchers believe it is the THC in marijuana that acts as protection against the damage experienced by any carcinogens a marijuana smoker is exposed to while smoking. Past research has shown that THC has anti-tumor properties. So much for
that argument against medical marijuana use.
Posted May 16th 2006 8:36PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Alternative Therapies, Drug, Chemotherapy

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved Cesamet,
a synthetic cannabinoid, THC, for treatment of nausea and vomiting associated with cancer chemotherapy in patients when conventional antiemetic treatments have failed. According to the American Cancer Society, approximately 70 to 80 percent of patients undergoing chemotherapy experience nausea and vomiting.
Current medications to relieve the side-effects of nausea and vomiting only work for less than half of cancer patients during chemotherapy. Cesamet as a prescription drug should be available in less than a month. Synthetic THC acts on the brain like the THC in smoked marijuana -- but eliminates having to inhale the otherwise harmful smoke contained in the illegal drug. Recently, the
FDA made a public statement that it did not support the use of medical marijuana.
Posted May 8th 2006 6:30AM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Drug

Nevada is home to the
loneliest road in America, legalized brothels and Las Vegas. Now -- according to a spokesman for Gov. Kenny Guinn -- the state government will help Nevadans with the ability to purchase
low-cost prescription drugs from Canada via the internet by providing direct web links to pharmacies in Canada. Nevada is not listening to the staunch objections from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to the fact that it is illegal. The legislators state that the import option is needed because many people pay twice as much for similar prescriptions in this country and often cannot afford the drugs they need to live. Lawmakers contend that the federal policies regarding the ability to obtain low-cost prescription drugs are simply a disgrace.

Nevada lawmakers passed the measure allowing Nevadans access to less expensive prescription drugs from Canada, and Nevada regulators have given approval to move ahead with implementing links to pharmacies in Canada. There will be a warning on the state website saying that the federal government views getting prescriptions filled in Canada with non-FDA-approved drugs an illegal act. The state website and links to Canadian pharmacies is scheduled
to go live today.
Posted May 2nd 2006 1:11PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Alternative Therapies, Drug, Chemotherapy
"On the night of my first round of chemotherapy, exactly six hours after I left the oncologist's
office wondering what all the fuss was about, my stomach tumbled into my knees, my knees refused to work altogether,
and I crumpled to the floor in a clammy, shivering heap.
I lay there until dawn, at one
point vomiting on myself, at another crying that I'd rather die of cancer than undergo chemo again." Breast
cancer made me a criminal is a Boston Globe opinion piece written by Lynda Gorov -- a breast cancer patient who
shares a personal account of the misery she suffered from the side effects of chemotherapy treatment and her choice to
turn to the possible use of marijuana for relief. She pulls no punches and makes a good point, by way of using herself
as an example, for the benefits of medical marijuana use and the ludicrous stand the government has taken to the
legalities of marijuana for medical purposes. If you are sitting on the fence on this issue, or have never gone through
chemotherapy and might not appreciate the grueling life-debilitating experience, her editorial is a
fair
one to read.
Posted Apr 15th 2006 6:18PM by Dalene Entenmann
Filed under: Alternative Therapies, Drug, Chemotherapy

In the United States, there is the war on drugs. There
is a war on cancer. There appears to be a war on cancer patients who need to use medical marijuana. In Canada, the
Global National is reporting that
medical marijuana
patients are being forced into the black market for the marijuana they need. In the United States, the same goes
on. Borders blur, and the wars seem to be the same.
At the bottom of an old Winnepeg, Manitoba mine
marijuana is legally grown and dried for cancer patients to use. But it is of such poor quality, it is estimated that a
third of the pot is returned. Then there are the cancer patients who can not afford the cost Health Canada charges.
Because of these factors, cancer patients are turning to compassion clubs for help. According to Phillipe
Lucas, who has set up a compassion club for cancer patients, "Compassion clubs are serving more people than Health
Canada, we're creating a better supply than Health Canada. And we're doing more legitimate research than Health Canada
and we're doing all of this at no cost to the taxpayer." Marijuana is classified as an illegal drug. Putting aside
your opinion on whether marijuana should be legalized -- right now it is not legal -- and essentially this is making
criminals out of cancer patients. Unless you are a cancer patient who has experienced the grueling cruel side-effects
of chemotherapy, or the persistent pain of cancer, you might not appreciate that there are a limited number of drugs
that work to alleviate side-effects and physical pain. Sometimes none of the prescription drugs work. For some cancer
patients, marijuana seems to work.