
Cannabis may be just what the doctor ordered for swine flu (AP Photo/Paul Franz)
Cannabis could alleviate many of the symptoms and harmful effects of the H5N1 bird flu and H1N1 swine flu viruses, according to a report from Cannabis Science, an emerging pharmaceutical cannabis company based in San Francisco. The timing could not be better for New York, which has the largest number of confirmed cases of swine flu in the United States, and where identical medical marijuana bills have been introduced in the Assembly and Senate for the first time.
According to Cannabis Science president and CEO Steven W. Kubby, his company’s whole-cannabis lozenges have anti-inflammatory properties that may present an effective and non-toxic treatment for minimizing the symptoms and harm from influenza infections.
“Our lozenges appear to down-regulate the body’s excessive inflammatory response to the influenza virus, which could reduce the deadly consequences of an infection into something that is more like a common cold,” says Kubby. “Because of my cancer and diminished auto-immune functions, even common influenza is a deadly threat, and I’ve had incredible symptomatic relief with the lozenge.”
Before reaching for their rolling papers, however, patients should keep in mind that smoke may make aggravate rather than relieve the symptoms.
Dr. Robert J. Melamede, a researcher and past Chairman of the Biology Department at the University of Colorado Springs, who also serves as chief science officer for Cannabis Science, cautions, “Smoked marijuana will not effectively prevent the excessive inflammatory response, despite delivering the beneficial pharmacological agents, due to the irritating, pro-inflammatory nature of smoke. In fact, I believe it will make things worse and should be avoided by infected individuals."
New York City and New York State are stockpiling Tamiflu, the conventional treatment for swine flu, but that drug is known to have severe side effects. Furthermore, influenza viruses are known rapidly mutate, which rendered Tamiflu ineffective against the most common flu strains this winter.
Kubby adds, “If a swine or bird flu pandemic emerges – and everyone seems to think that it is just a matter of when, not if – there is simply no time for the usual bureaucratic process. With emergency government approval, we can legally access the huge supply of medical cannabis available in California to produce millions of life saving doses within a relatively short period of time.”
Fortunately, New York has a real chance of enacting a medical marijuana bill this year. The Assembly bill, A. 7542, has 50 sponsors and was passed by the Health Committee yesterday. The Senate version, S. 4041-A, currently has 15 sponsors.
The annual New York Marijuana March will take place this Saturday, May 2, starting at 11:00 a.m. at Washington Square Park and proceeding to Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. With a potential swine flu pandemic stirring popular concern, medical marijuana activists may find their moment has finally arrived.
For more info: Cannabis Science











Comments
Yes, it is also a cure for swollen ankles, pink eye, heavy handedness, jobloss syndrome, and the blues. Where can I get some?
Using a vaporizer would mitigate some of the problems associated with smoking the herb.
Also meningitis sufferers are relieved from the swelling and excruciating pain.
Interesting article as opposed to all the boring swine flu ones.
would a vaporizer really work? I know they are healthier, but the article said smoke of any kind is harmful. i think the only way cannabis would work would be in pill form or in edibles
would a vaporizer really work? i thought the article said smoke of any kind would irritate and be more harmful. i think the only way cannabis would help would be in pill form or edibles
Not that I'm against eventually using cannabis as a legal form of medication, but the suggestion of skipping the "usual bureaucratic process" is a daunting one. That implies skipping FDA clinical trials, which, while tedious, help to ensure the safety of medication. Skipping them for one drug may lead to a slippery slope of skipping it for many drugs, which in the end can cause more harm than good.
Great article!
Meg Marquardt... I'd recommend looking into the works of Mary Ruwart. She provides very strong evidence that FDA approval does far more harm than good.
the picture in the article is not cannabis....
hey bwd ur dumb dats medical cannabis !!! they just altered the genes in the plant to do medical needs
izzat you George !
we all miss you ..................not!
Ms. Marquardt,
The FDA has had decades to look into the efficacy of medicinal marijuana and they absolutely refuse to for political reasons.
While they politicized the process, how many people have needlessly suffered, and in quite a few cases, died?
the bud in the pic is real its genes are changed to be healthier and have better effects, plus that bud looks as if it just got harvested and has not been cured yet
that picture is absolutely NOT cannabis, and as far as the difference goes between cannabis and "medical cannabis", there really is none..... certain strains are more suited to help certain conditions but there isn't a specific strain referred to as medical cannabis... heavy indicas may help pain relief, appetite, or sleep conditions, while plants that lean more sativa may be better for depression and anxiety because of it's uplifting effects.
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