Germany legalises medical use of cannabis
Friday, January 20, 2017
Yesterday, the German Bundestag passed a law to legalise cannabis drug for medicinal purposes. The law is to come under effect in March.
"Seriously ill people must be treated in the best ways possible" ((de))German language: Schwerkranke Menschen müssen bestmöglich versorgt werden., German health minister Hermann Gröhe tweeted. Doctors can prescribe marijuana — cannabis — for patients suffering from multiple sclerosis, chronic pain, or loss of appetite or nausea from cancer's chemotherapy treatment.
Christian Democrats (CDU) lawmaker Rainer Hayek said this law would still prevent recreational use of cannabis. The cost of cannabis is to be covered under health insurance. Patients can buy dried buds or cannabis extracts from pharmacies with a prescription or get synthetic derivatives from other countries, though possession of the drug in large quantities is not allowed.
Cannabis cultivation is to be monitored by the government. Germany has joined other European countries such as Austria, Spain, France, Italy, Portugal and Netherlands in legalising the drug to some extent.
In October, a 53-year-old multiple sclerosis patient showed cannabis was the only solution to reduce his pain, and the court granted him permission to grow as many as 130 plants in one year for personal use. Purchasing, rather than growing, medical cannabis at the time cost about €15 (US$16.85) per gram.
Sources
- "German parliament legalizes cannabis for medical consumption" — Deutsche Welle, January 19, 2017
- AFP. "German lawmakers green-light medical cannabis use" — Yahoo! News, January 19, 2017
- "Why Germany just legalized medical marijuana" — The Local, January 19, 2017
- Hermann Gröhe. "Hermann Gröhe on Twitter" — Twitter, January 19, 2017 (German)
- "Germany allows MS patient to grow cannabis in unprecedented case" — Deutsche Welle, October 3, 2016