Reform Marijuana Laws NORML Site Map Contact Us About Marijuana Law Reform Media Contact About Marijuana Law Reform Home
Working to reform marijuana laws
search by
Click here to navigate by map
State Laws | Leyes Estatales
 
 
 
 
 
Get NORML's eZine
Meet Others, Share Stories
Get NORML's eZine
Legislative Alerts, News & Analysis from NORML

Details & Privacy


Home > News Archive > 2000 > Research Demonstrates Marijuana Is Safe For HIV Patients

Research Demonstrates Marijuana Is Safe For HIV Patients

Share This Page Share This Page on digg Share This Page on Reddit Share This Page on del.icio.us Share This Page on Stumble Upon Share This Page on Facebook Share This Page on Twitter

July 20, 2000 - San Francisco, CA, USA

Researchers at the University of California-San Francisco have found that HIV patients who smoke marijuana do not disrupt the effect of anti-retroviral drugs.
This was the first double blind study in the United States to examine marijuana and HIV patients. Sixty-seven people participated in the study that was conducted by Donald Abrams, MD at San Francisco General Hospital. Twenty of the patients smoked marijuana three times a day and gained an average of 7.7 pounds during the 21-day study; 25 patients took oral dronabinol (synthetic THC) and gained on average 7 pounds; and 21 patients took the placebo and gained only 2.9 pounds on average.
Thirty-six of the patients started the study with undetectable HIV RNA levels and those levels remained constant throughout the study. The 26 patients who had detectable HIV RNA levels experienced declines. The patients who smoked marijuana or took oral dronabinol experienced slightly greater decreases in HIV RNA levels than the patients who took the placebo.
"The slightly better decline experienced by those using marijuana or dronabinol is intriguing, but not statistically significant," Abrams said. "The good news is that there is no statistical difference between the three groups."
"The fact of the matter is that any good clinician with his eyes and ears open has known for a long time that cannabis is very useful in the treatment of the AIDS reduction syndrome and does not harm patients," said Professor Lester Grinspoon, MD, of the Harvard Medical School and NORML Foundation Chair. "When all the dust settles, and when marijuana is admitted to the U.S. pharmacopoeia, it will be seen as one of the least toxic drugs in the whole compendium."
For more information, please contact Donald Abrams at (415) 476-9554 ext. 12; Allen St. Pierre, NORML Foundation Executive Director at (202) 483-8751; or Lester Grinspoon, MD, NORML Foundation Chair at (617) 277-8423.

    updated: Jul 20, 2000

Share This Page Share This Page on digg Share This Page on Reddit Share This Page on del.icio.us Share This Page on Stumble Upon Share This Page on Facebook Share This Page on Twitter

2009   2008   2007   2006   2005   2004   2003   2002   2001   2000   1999   1998   1997   1996  
Country State/Prov Year Month
Join the NORML Legal Committee
Features
Features
   
NORML
Site MapContact UsSupport NORMLTake ActionLibrary
© 2009 NORML • Privacy StatementSite Terms • Site by Communicopia and Red Aphid
NORML and the NORML Foundation: 1600 K Street NW, Suite 501, Washington DC, 20006-2832
Tel: (202) 483-5500 • Fax: (202) 483-0057 • Email: norml@norml.org