Saturday, January 12, 2008

COURT STRIKES DOWN REG ON POT GROWERS






strikes down regulation limiting growers of medical marijuana
Last Updated: Friday, January 11, 2008 | 12:45 AM ET
CBC News
Canadians who are prescribed marijuana to treat their illnesses will no longer be forced to rely on the federal government as a supplier following a Federal Court ruling that struck down a key restriction in Ottawa's controversial medical marijuana program.


The decision by Judge Barry Strayer, released late Thursday, essentially grants medical marijuana users more freedom in picking their own grower and allows growers to supply the drug to more than one patient.


It's also another blow to the federal government, whose attempts to tightly control access to medical marijuana have prompted numerous court challenges.


Currently, medical users can grow their own pot but growers can't supply the drug to more than one user at a time.


Lawyers for medical users argued that restriction effectively established Health Canada as the country's sole legal provider of medical marijuana.


They also said the restriction was unfair, and that it prevented seriously ill Canadians from obtaining the drug they needed to treat their debilitating illnesses.


In his decision, Strayer called the provision unconstitutional and arbitrary, as it "caused individuals a major difficulty with access…"

Ottawa must also reconsider requests made by a group of medical users who brought the matter to court to have a single outside supplier as their designated producer, Strayer said in his 23-page decision.

While the government has argued that medical users who can't grow their own marijuana can obtain it from its contract manufacturer, fewer than 20 per cent of patients actually use the government's supply, Strayer wrote.


"In my view it is not tenable for the government, consistently with the right established in other courts for qualified medical users to have reasonable access to marijuana, to force them either to buy from the government contractor, grow their own or be limited to the unnecessarily restrictive system of designated producers," he wrote.

Ron Marzel, a Toronto lawyer representing the group of medical users who brought the matter before the Federal Court, called the decision a "great remedy" for his clients.


"All this means is that the limit — the one-to-one ratio — it's the last nail in the coffin for that ratio," he said in an interview.


"The court has said, 'Look, unequivocally, this is unconstitutional, it's arbitrary. All the reasons you've provided us with so far for this one-to-one ratio, they don't pass muster. We don't buy it, we don't accept it."'

The provision had been struck down by the courts before, but was reinstated by the government who contracted Prairie Plant Systems Inc. in Flin Flon, Man., to provide the drug to patients

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Wish i Had Farm & a Tour Bus!!!






This would enable all my family to move in together & help look after my mom.The Tour bus is for going across Canada doing HIV-AIDs Education & awareness talks with 12-25 other HIV+ persons of dif race & cultures,& we would all have cam-corders to tape our views on this journey.When we get to a city we would break into smaller teams & thereby attending more places=depending on how many were traveling along.if we were 12 we could break into teams of 3 & hit 4dif places in the morning & 4dif places in the afternoon!making 8 places where HIV-AIDs storys could be told at at each city each day.The crowd would be able to identify with at least 1 person up on stage,as they would be from all races!This is my dream,& am also thinking ofd starting a group called Positivly Speaking!Watch for it coming soon!!!well folks,thats all for tonight,i wish all my fellow HIV-AIDS WARRIORS PEACE,HAPPINESS & LOVE!!!WATCHED FREDDY MURCURY TONIGHT-GREAT SHOWMAN-GENIOUS REALLY-PEACE N LOVE NOT WARS N WALLS EH FOLKS!!!

Sunday, January 6, 2008

AIDS PATIENTS LIVING LONGER-FACING DOWNSIDE!~BY JAMIE GROSS-REPOSTED BY JAMES JC GOUGH






Aging AIDS patients facing downside of living longer
With longevity have come unexpected medical conditions
By Jane Gross
New York Times News Service
Published: January 6, 2008
CHICAGO — John Holloway received a diagnosis of AIDS nearly two decades ago, when the disease was a speedy-death sentence and treatment a distant dream.
Yet at 59 he is alive, thanks to a cocktail of drugs that changed the course of an epidemic. But with longevity has come a host of unexpected medical conditions, which challenge the prevailing view of AIDS as a manageable, chronic disease.

Holloway, who lives in a housing complex designed for the frail elderly, suffers from complex health problems usually associated with advanced age: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, kidney failure, a bleeding ulcer, severe depression, rectal cancer and the lingering effects of a broken hip.

Those illnesses are not what Holloway expected when lifesaving antiretroviral drugs became the standard of care in the mid-1990s.

The drugs gave Holloway back his future. But at what cost?

That is the question, heretical to some, that is now being voiced by scientists, doctors and patients encountering a constellation of ailments showing up prematurely or in disproportionate numbers among the first wave of AIDS survivors to reach late middle age.

Experts are coming to believe that the immune system and organs of long-term survivors took an irreversible beating before the advent of lifesaving drugs and that those very drugs then produced additional complications because of their toxicity — a one-two punch.

The graying of the AIDS epidemic has increased interest in the connection between AIDS and cardiovascular disease, certain cancers, diabetes, osteoporosis and depression. The number of people 50 and older living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, has increased 77 percent from 2001 to 2005, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, and they now represent more than a quarter of all cases in the United States.

Larry Kramer, the founder of several AIDS advocacy groups and a long-term survivor, said he had always suspected "it was only a matter of time before stuff like this happened," given the potency of the antiretroviral drugs.

"How long will the human body be able to tolerate that constant bombardment?" he asked. "We are now seeing that many bodies can't. Once again, just as we thought we were out of the woods, sort of, we have good reason again to be really scared."

© 2008 Deseret News Publishing Company | All rights reserved

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

PEACE N LOVE N CHA CHA CHAAA???






am 44,single & do HIV-AIDS Edu & awar. Harm -reduction-methadone,safe sex ect.if u want to know anything just ask & i

Entry for January 01, 2008/NEW YEARS DAY-SICK OF COURSE!!!
Entry for January 01, 2008/NEW YEARS DAY-SICK OF COURSE!!! magnify
I am not feeling so well because i caught something from someone on the bus back or too the Sault,stuffy & runny nose,ackes & pains are more pronounced that usual,lethargic,mix in depression and my immune system is takin a shit kickin with all this stress!!!I must try to relax & get better,taking things one day at a time,if i am to go back to the soo on the 15 i am hoping to be well by then.Claude needs help with my mom but is too proud to ask for it from anyone.He's trying his best he says but isnt getting her showered or bathed...just a wetcloth wipe down & thats not good enough i think,aas well as my mom's sister marg,who thinks claude is not trying at all,and is very critical about his motives.Nways i want to talk to a past love that might be able to assist me somewhat in this mess.I wouldnt mind talkin to my boy either,miss that smart ass,& could never stay angry even if he did say things he should never say to a person,dad or not.He knows better i am sure.Nways here it is New Years day n sick with a cold,chest & head from the feel of it,lungs havent been this congested in a long time,if ever!!!Plus i am really worried about my mom & the fact that she needs better care ,or a stronger worker to life her into the shower.I am going up to help in this area,hopeing she will be able to at last take a bath or hot shower!!!I am hoping i will get this cold over with as i need blood work done as well.Going in now its sure to be down alot,guess we'll see just by how much though eh folks?cha cha chaaa!PEACE N LOVE NOT WARS N WALLS EH FOLKS!!!

cool stuff

will we find a cure for HIV-AIDS?