While the DEA has been busy reclassifying cannabidiol (CBD) as a Schedule I drug—right up there with heroin—our friends across the pond are rightly classifying it as a medicine.
The decision
made on Monday by Britain’s
Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) was based on credible claims that CBD
successfully treats serious diseases.
The new
classification means products containing CBD can now be legally distributed
across the United Kingdom.
“We have come
to the opinion that products containing cannabidiol (CBD) used for medical
purposes are a medicine,” said an MHRA spokesperson on the agency’s website.
“MHRA will now work with individual companies and trade bodies in relation to
making sure products containing CBD, used for a medical purpose, which can be
classified as medicines, satisfy the legal requirements of the Human Medicines
Regulations 2012.”
Throughout
2016, an increasing number of British Parliament members called for reform
of Britain’s “failing drug laws,” arguing that an “evidence-based
approach” should be central to effective drugs policies.
Alas, the
government listened and acted accordingly.
Gerald
Heddell, director of inspection and enforcement at MHRA, told Sky News: “The change really came
about with us offering an opinion that CBD is in fact a medicine, and that
opinion was based on the fact that we noted that people were making some quite
stark claims about serious diseases that could be treated with CBD.”
This decision
on the part of the MHRA comes only several months after the agency sent cease and desist orders to vendors and producers, ordering it
to be “removed from sale in the UK.”
Although the
UK does not recognize weed as having medical benefits, promoting the
classification of CBD as a medicine is a step in the right direction.
In view of the
fact that UK-based GW
Pharmaceuticals has made huge
strides recently with its CBD-based Epidiolex for rare,
treatment-resistant epilepsy, the MHRA’s decision makes perfect sense.
So, what are
we waiting for here in the U.S.?
It is not like
we haven’t been exposed to the information. Indeed, U.S. researchers, including
the American Epilepsy Society,
have encouraged and/or undertaken relevant research.
In early
December, researchers from the University of Alabama found that CBD oil reduces both the
frequency and severity of seizures in children and adults with severe,
intractable epilepsy. In two-thirds of the 81 participants, the severity was
reduced by at least 50 percent.
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