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The secret is out: marijuana is medicine.
And not to the surprise of the pharmaceutical industry, who is slowly
but surely gaining exclusive rights to the medical properties of this
age-old plant.
But wait. How can a company, other
than Monsanto, patent a plant? That’s not a serious question, but it
brings up a serious point. Patents on marijuana have yet to cover
genetic modifications of the plant itself, but rather involve the
cannabinoids found in marijuana that are responsible for its medical
effects.
Phytocannabinoids in the treatment of cancer (Patent No. US20130059018)
The most recent patent filing
on cannabinoids comes from none other than GW Pharmaceuticals – the
UK-based company that manufactures Sativex (1). Sativex is an oral spray
that contains cannabinoids derived from the cannabis plant itself,
specifically THC and CBD. Although Sativex is not yet available in
the U.S., it has already gained approval in Canada, the UK and eight
other European countries.
GW Pharma has been quick to recognize the
market potential of cannabis and their most recent patent application
makes this more than clear. Just from the title of the patent, one gets a
good sense of what GW Pharma has been trying to claim as their own.
“Phytocannabinoids” simply means cannabinoids derived from plants,
referring to the cannabis plant in this case.
Unsurprisingly, it appears as though GW
Pharma encountered difficulties in trying to claim such a broad
“invention”. In fact, the updated version of their patent application
shows that more than half of their original patent claims were
retracted, and for good reason too. Looking back in time, GW Pharma made
claims to just the use of isolated cannabinoids in the treatment of
cancer, which is no more of an invention than it is a theft from
individuals who first proclaimed marijuana’s cancer-fighting abilities
decades ago.
On the other hand, GW Pharma’s remaining
claims might just pass through the Patent Office without further
questioning. GW Pharma seems to be familiar with the pharmaceutical
industry’s shrewd patent strategies, which involves modifying
pre-existing compounds that have already been proven to work.
In this case, all GW Pharma had to do was
claim that they invented a cannabis-based botanical drug substance for
treating cancer – botanical drug substance meaning any form of marijuana
prepared by methods as simple as aqueous or ethanolic extraction. There
you have it. GW Pharma invented neither cannabis nor a method of
extraction, but still consider themselves to be inventors of
“phytocannabinoids in the treatment of cancer”.
Cannabinoids as antioxidants and neuroprotectants (Patent No. US6630507)
Perhaps the most infamous
marijuana-related patent belongs to the U.S. federal government
themselves. Indeed, while federal agents have been keeping busy trying
to defend their stance on pot prohibition, they also made sure to file
patents on the medical components of the very same Schedule I drug. The
funny thing is, this particular patent dates all the way back to 1998
when Bill “didn’t inhale” Clinton was still president.
Although federal patent writers made sure
to include a long list of synthetic cannabinoids within their claims,
carefully tucked away is none other than cannabidiol, also known as CBD.
Once again, the inventive step in this patent seems to be severely
lacking, but maybe the federal government gets more flexibility with
their patent filings.
Regardless, it seems as though the use of
CBD for the treatment of “stroke and trauma”, “Alzheimer’s disease,
Parkinson’s disease and HIV dementia” and a “wide variety of oxidation
associated diseases, such as ischemic, age-related, inflammatory and
autoimmune diseases” all belongs to the White House, at least for the
next 10 years until their patent expires.
Private funding matters more
It might be easy to blame an outdated
patent system for what seems to be just another one of the many
injustices that plague the private health care system. But the truth is,
it’s not really the Patent Office’s fault that marijuana is being taken
over by capital-backed corporations and government agencies.
Rather, the fault lies in the restrictive
nature of medical marijuana research, which is overseen by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) – the only source of legal marijuana in
the U.S.
According to researchers (2) who have
attempted to conduct clinical trials on cannabis, the NIDA is simply
uninterested in supplying cannabis for medical studies, in accordance
with a mandate from Congress that limits NIDA researchers to
investigating the marijuana’s dangers. And being the overwhelmingly
benign substance (3) that it is, marijuana hasn’t been the subject of
many NIDA studies for a while now.
But perhaps the worst outcome of this
situation is not the fact that clinical research on medical marijuana is
severely lacking. No, the worst part is that the gap in research is
eagerly being filled by corporations like GW Pharma. Indeed, while there
were a total 37 clinical studies (4) conducted on cannabinoids between
2005-2009, only 8 of them involved actual marijuana. On the other hand, 9
of the 37 studies involved Sativex, with the rest consisting of a
variety of synthetic THC formulations, no doubt sponsored by their
respective manufacturers as well.
So where does this leave the rest of us?
Not too far from where we started off it seems, since it’s no surprise
to anyone that healthcare will continue to be driven by privately funded
research, even in the case of marijuana. But all that research money
has to come from somewhere, and you can bet it’s not coming from the
deep pockets of GW Pharma’s executive board.
As it turns out, a couple of shrewd
businessmen with knowledge of medicine realized long ago that sick and
dying individuals will pay almost any price for the promise of relief,
even if it happens to be all of their life savings and then some. What
happened to these businessmen? Oh, they’re still around. We just call
them Big Pharma.
Source:
wakingtimes.com
http://worldtruth.tv
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