CBD reclassified as medicine in UK from November 1st 2016

Bottom line, is that I am interested in this because it helps to take away the pain I have with my arthritis, so where is the harm in that?

Because you never ever mention that fact in any of your opening posts. Although I'm not sure how your mocking of governments etc. helps with that.
 
I don't see how this is a bad thing. regulated like it should be, you know your getting what you are supposed to, and can actually be properly dosed.

it is very cheap so if heirs science backing up the claims, then it will be prescribed.
however if their isn't science backing up the claims then it wont be.
 
Sounds good, a bit of regulation, means the drug, if that's what it is under control, addiction can be monitored, and if there is scientific evidence of its use, then it can be prescribed to you.

Is there scientific evidence regarding this drug?
 
Bottom line, is that I am interested in this because it helps to take away the pain I have with my arthritis, so where is the harm in that?

Get a prescription then if you can convince a medical professional that is the best medicine for you.
 
Is there scientific evidence regarding this drug?

How on earth could they classify CBD as having medical use if there was not!?

:P

(granted we do live in stange times tough, where some knowledge is ignored while others are jumped on)


(I guess next they will be figuring out a way to prove it causes something daft like cancer, maybe by injecting massive amount of it's isolated form into some rodent liver, or something, but this is another story)
 
Seems like a sensible decision to me. People who genuinely need this stuff will easily get a prescription for it, so they won't be affected.

I've had ankylosing spondilitis (a form of arthritis) for 15 years. I've never taken CBD for it (codeine does the trick) but it's nice to know the option is there for others.

The CBD sellers will scream bloody murder of course, because up until now they've been able to get away with selling it to people who never actually needed it—under the claim that 'it's medicinal'—and now that it actually will be classified as medicine, they won't be able to sell it anymore. A beautiful irony.

I wonder if they'll try arguing that it's not medicinal now? :p
 
Fingers crossed people who benefit it can get easy access to it and more importantly, affordably.

I just hope this isn't a nasty way of prohibiting it by stopping manufacturing of it, rather than just dub it illegal.
 
Seems like a sensible decision to me. People who genuinely need this stuff will easily get a prescription for it

Apparently from what I'm reading, this classification effectively ends legal sale of the oil in the UK.

It doesn't mean you need a prescription, it means nobody can sell it, without applying for a license (which costs over £100,000) and submitting clinical trials data.

In other words, it's just made it illegal...
 
Apparently from what I'm reading, this classification effectively ends legal sale of the oil in the UK.

It doesn't mean you need a prescription, it means nobody can sell it, without applying for a license (which costs over £100,000) and submitting clinical trials data.

In other words, it's just made it illegal...

No, it's been classified as a medicine, which is why a licence will be required to sell it. Clinical trials have already approved its effectiveness, although individual sellers will still need to confirm that their particular product meets the required standard, which may require them to conduct their own trials or resell product which has already passed. Rather than making CBD illegal, this legislation will confirm its legality.

A U.K. government regulator says certain cannabis products can be considered medicine, in a big win for the campaign to legalize cannabis use.

The decision from the U.K.’s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) applies to products containing Cannabidiol (CBD), a specially bred variety of cannabis that has extremely low levels of the hallucinogenic drug THC, meaning it does not cause a high but is thought to retain the same health benefits of other forms of cannabis.

The MHRA review found that CBD has a “restoring, correcting or modifying” effect on “physiological functions” when administered to humans, the U.K.’s Independent reports.

“We have come to the opinion that products containing cannabidiol (CBD) are a medicine,” said the MHRA, in a statement to TIME. “Products for therapeutic use must have a medicines’ licence before they can be legally sold, supplied or advertised in the UK. Products will have to meet safety, quality and effectiveness standards to protect public health.”

The government’s review came about as a result of discussions between the MHRA and CBD vaporizer company MediPen, the Independent reports.

“Since our inception we’ve worked hard to obtain our goal of breaking down the negative connotations surrounding cannabis to lead to a reform in the law for medicinal use,” Jordan Owen, MediPen’s managing director, told the Independent. “Now this is finally becoming a reality.”

(Source).
 
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Definitely a bad decision, harms the most vulnerable people while providing no benefit. Nice bit of damage to the economy as well.
 
Explain?
Harms what economy?
Where was this being sold before?

Did you not read the article?

This is being sold in the UK currently, this will stop within 28 days, say goodbye to all those jobs and the tax revenue and hello to more illegal cannabis use and people claiming JSA.
 
This is being sold in the UK currently, this will stop within 28 days

It won't stop being sold, it'll simply be regulated.

This is actually a huge win for the pharmaceutical companies. I expect they will corner the market in CBD now.
 
A neutered form of cannabis that does not produce a high and is chemically enough different (read: not very) to be patented has been going through trials recently. This tells me they think they'll be able to get it approved and something doctors prescribe because they're criminalising things that could conceivably compete with it. You'll find something equivalent (but licenced only by some big pharmaceutical companies) being sold again soon.
 
I actually know about this stuff but I will relegate myself to....................

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:(

Well you know its just how the world works now.! ;)

Or is it???? :D
 
Did you not read the article?

This is being sold in the UK currently, this will stop within 28 days, say goodbye to all those jobs and the tax revenue and hello to more illegal cannabis use and people claiming JSA.

Unless the oil was being used recreationally, people that actually need this will still be able to get it.

I'm sure making codeine available without prescriptions, would increase sales for certain shops, doesn't make it a good argument to make it available without prescriptions. The state has a duty of care to look after the supply and production of medicines.

JSA claims aren't higher because powerful pain meds aren't available without prescriptions. Another rubbish argument.

It won't stop being sold, it'll simply be regulated.

This is actually a huge win for the pharmaceutical companies. I expect they will corner the market in CBD now.

The problem is that (as I suspect represents the majority of sales) the recreational and the placebo effect market will now not be able to get this via prescriptions.
 
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