By THOMAS MITCHELL
Source: westword.com
The World Health Organization, the health agency of the United Nations, has
officially recommended that cannabidiol (CBD) not be internationally scheduled as
a controlled substance.
WHO research on CBD's therapeutic use and side effects
found that the cannabinoid was not a public danger.
"Recent evidence from animal and human studies shows that its use could have
some therapeutic value for seizures due to epilepsy and related conditions. Current
evidence also shows that cannabidiol is not likely to be abused or create
dependence as for other cannabinoids (such as Tetra Hydro Cannabinol (THC), for
instance)," reads an announcement from the WHO Expert Committee on Drug
Dependence.
CBD has shown that it has medical benefits for epileptic seizures, pain, insomnia
and inflammation, among other afflictions; it can be derived from both
psychoactive cannabis and hemp. According to the WHO report, there is also
preliminary evidence that it can treat Alzheimer's disease, Crohn's disease, certain
forms of cancer, Parkinson's disease and other serious conditions.
Although processed and sold without regulation in America, hemp-derived CBD
remains a Schedule I substance with the federal government, because it's classified
under the same branch as psychoactive cannabis. However, CBD derived from
industrial hemp, a member of the cannabis family that has less than 0.3 percent
THC, doesn't carry psychoactive or addictive effects, according to the study.
WHO found that CBD offers medical benefits for both humans and animals
without a risk of addiction. "In an animal drug discrimination model, CBD failed to
substitute for THC. In humans, CBD exhibits no effects indicative of any abuse or
dependence potential," the report reads. "To date, there is no evidence of
recreational use of CBD or any public health-related problems associated with the
use of pure CBD."
Raul Elizalde, a medical marijuana advocate in Mexico, spoke at a World Health Organization meeting in November to urge WHO
not to schedule CBD.
Raul Elizalde, a medical marijuana advocate who's president of hemp-CBD
company HempMeds Mexico, spoke with WHO during its 39th annual meeting of
the Expert Committee on Drug Dependence in November.
Elizalde helped spearhead Mexico's legalization of medical marijuana with less than 1 percent THC
in June, and hoped to persuade WHO to do something similar by not acting — or in
this case, not scheduling.
"If CBD was scheduled as a drug, the only way CBD would have been available is as
a pharmaceutical," he told us before the WHO decision came down. "Drugs are
scheduled for being psychoactive, addictive or damaging to people's health. This
wouldn't be available to a lot of patients that it used to be available to around the
world if scheduled."
Most modernized countries, including America and Mexico, signed international
drug treaties in the ’60s, '70s and ’80s that ban psychotropic substances, including
cannabis. By not scheduling CBD as an addictive or psychotropic substance, the
UN Office on Drugs and Crime cannot sanction countries for legalizing CBD.
"We should be very aware of international laws, because all of these treaties we've
signed — the U.S., Mexico and so on — have to be protected," Elizalde explained.
"CBD should never be a scheduled drug. Everywhere around America is changing
the way cannabis is regulated."
The WHO report also called for fuller review of CBD in May 2018, when the ECDD
will go through a more comprehensive review of cannabis and cannabis-related
substances.
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