People should have the right to use any substance they believe may be
helpful in their pursuit of physical health and well being. While
most people would prefer to consult with trained medical professionals
about their healthcare questions, there is nothing innately wrong with
a person making his or her own medical choices, not only about
medicine but about health care in general. Medical rights include the
right to take or refuse to take medicines, herbs, therapies, and any
other medical treatment.

Marijuana is one example of a natural substance that has been used
worldwide as a medicine since before recorded history. Only since 1937
has its use been banned in the United States. Medical use of marijuana
has gained a lot of publicity since voters began passing state
initiatives legalizing medical use in the early 1990s. Over 10 states
now allow for medical use, including California, Oregon, Washington,
Nevada, Alaska, Hawaii, Colorado, Maine, and Montana.

Four polls of Arkansas voters conducted since 2000 show that about
two-thirds of the state’s voters (63-66%) support this reform.

Mainstream medical associations support the idea that doctors should
be free from fear of prosecution if they wish to discuss alternative
therapies such as marijuana with their patients, but stop short of
calling for the legalization of medical use. This is due to the claim that marijuana has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, that smoking is never a good way to administer a drug, and that raw marijuana cannot be ‘dosed’ in measurable amounts.

For a complete discussion of the medical question pertaining to  marijuana, visit Alliance for Reform of Drug Policy in Arkansas, Inc.
Supporters of this reform have worked since 1999 to gain voter signatures on petitions which would place the question before voters and to pass a law through legislative action. .

Drug Policy Education Group, Inc. has published a series of patient profile advertisements in newspapers around the state and has produced a video "Illegal Healthcare: Medical Marijuana and Arkansas" featuring Arkansas patients.

Yes! Say over 63% of Arkansas registered voters, polled three times since 1999.

Yes! Say over 75% of persons polled nationally.

Yes! Say voters and legislators in eleven states, including Arizona, California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Alaska, Hawaii, Colorado, Maine and Montana.

Yes! Say the National Association for Public Health Policy, New England Journal of Medicine, Kaiser Permanente, and over a hundred other respected medical, legal, and advocacy organizations.

Now it time for Arkansas to say YES!, according to the Alliance for Reform of Drug Policy in Arkansas, Inc. Supporters of this reform have worked since 1999 to pass a law in Arkansas that would set up a legal medical marijuana system for the state.

Drug Policy Education Group, Inc. has published a series of patient profile advertisements in newspapers around the state. (click here to see ads coming soon) These ads are part of an education campaign that have included local town hall meetings, distribution of newsletters and other publications, and donation of books to libraries across the state.

"Illegal Healthcare: Medical Marijuana and Arkansas" is a 20 minute video produced by DPEG featuring Arkansas patients and explaining more about this proposed law. Click Here Illegal Healthcare Video (view online) to view the video.  For more information about the Arkansas Medical Rights Act, visit the Alliance website at www.ardpark.org

Alliance for Reform of Drug Policy in Arkansas

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Other medical marijuana information
can be obtained at the following sites:

Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, hosted by Robert Randall, the first American supplied with medical marijuana by the federal government. His book is available at this site, Marijuana Rx:  The Patients' Fight for Medicinal Pot. Marijuana-as-medicine.org
Hosted by Dr. Lester Grinspoon, Harvard Medical School and author of several works on marijuana. Especially recommended is Marijuana: The Forbidden Medicine. www.rxmarihuana.com
 Patients Out of Time maintains a list of organizations and individuals who endorse the legal availability of marijuana for medical purposes. At this site, you can order videos of their recent conference on cannabis therapeutics hosted by the University of Iowa School of Nursing.  MedicalCannabis.org
Cannabis in Medical Practice: A Legal, Historical, and Pharmacological Overview of the Therapeutic Use of Marijuana Edited by Mary Lynn Mathre, RN Order from  www.mcfarlandpub.com
Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base, an 18-month study conducted by the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine and released in March 1999. Ordering information, executive summary, and full text available at  http://books.nap.edu/catalog/6376.html
George McMahon's Home Page: "Welcome to my home page. I am the 5th legal medical marijuana recipient in the United States. Since March of 1990, I have been receiving a monthly prescription for medical marijuana from the federal government." (This website no longer available: http://trv1.trvnet.net/~mmcmahon/)
Cannabis in Japan: "Cannabis hemp (marijuana) has been used a medicine for thousands of years. Various medical uses were described 4000 years ago by the Chinese emperor Shen-nung in his medical book Pen-ts'ao Ching. Cannabis was mentioned as a medicine in the susruta of India before the 8th century A.D. It's main uses nowadays include treatment of pain, nausea, lack of appetite, sleeping disorders, auto-immune diseases (MS) and glaucoma."                                         www.taima.org/en/medical.htm
Inside a compassionate pot plantation: MSNBC visits a state-approved marijuana farm in California.  www.msnbc.com/news/120686.asp?cp1=1
Marijuana News: "Freedom has nothing to fear from the truth."                                               www.marijuananews.com/medical_cannabis.htm
Waiting to inhale: hemp for health? ww.msnbc.com/news/120685.asp

Medical Marijuana Ruling Unclear, Ten states have chosen to allow the legal use of marijuana for medicinal purposes. For more of this story, Click Here.

Medical research updates

Hopeful preliminary science meets US science establishment stonewall

US Medical science is second to none - why won't they study marijuana?

Winter 2004 - latest status of UK whole-cannabis oral spray

Instructions on how to make a simple but effective vaporizer at home

Study shows vaporizer can drastically reduce toxins in marijuana smoke

Click here to view a list of the ads DPEG has recently run in newspapers across Arkansas

Marijuana Has Exciting Potential as a Medicine
A Rebuttal to the Anti-Medical Marijuana Arguments Posed by the
U. S. Drug Enforcement Administration on their website page "Exposing the Myth of Medical Marijuana"