Welcome to Oaksterdam News Network
Home arrow Volume Two arrow V2 Issue 2 arrow Cannabis Therapeutics conference
Adjust Text -
Cannabis Therapeutics conference PDF Print E-mail
Written by Tristin Coffman   
Santa Barbara college to sponsor a medical marijuana CME symposium

The Fourth National Clinical Conference on Cannabis Therapeutics will be held April 5-8, hosted by Santa Barbara City College and accredited by California health organizations. The theme of the conference is: The Body-Mind Connection. Presenters include international cannabinoid researchers as well as patients in the federal medical marijuana program, the IND.

Image
Irv Rosenfeld, one of seven federal medical marijuana patients, shows a canister of 300 joints. Photo by Mikki Norris
The pricey ($205 to $405 admission) symposium provides essential educational material and experience for patients, caregivers and anyone concerned with the healing properties of the cannabis plant and its derivatives along with CLE credit for physicians, nurses and health care professionals.


While numerous aspects of scientific research and clinical use will be covered, the core of the curriculum will involve both physical cannabis treatment and the use of cannabis for PTSD, ADD, depression and other emotional or psychological problems. The event is sponsored by Patients Out of Time, a non-profit charity that specializes in the education of health care professionals about the efficacy of cannabis.

Patients Out of Time President Mary Lynn Mathre, RN, MSN, CARN said, “The accreditation of our educational work by the University of California San Francisco’s Office of Continuing Medical Education, the hosting of the forum by the Santa Barbara City College, coupled with the co-sponsorship of the California Nurses Association has ensured that the US federal government’s claim that cannabis has no medicinal value will be, again, completely rebutted.” UCSF designates AMA PRA credits and includes CME credits toward Pain Management and End-of-Life Care.

 “The patients’ therapeutic cannabis use have always been supported by the academic and medical communities which have publicly, in huge numbers, called for the immediate access to cannabis under medical supervision,” continued  Mathre. Past educational credits for the work of this national group have been granted by the Colleges of Nursing and Medicine of the University of Iowa; the Virginia Nurses Association, the University of Virginia’s Schools of Medicine, Nursing and Law; the Oregon Department of Human Services, Health Services and the Oregon Nurses Association among other conservative, professional health care organizations.

Online registration, a faculty list and full agenda for this internationally recognized conference series is available at www.medicalcannabis.com. For more info, contact Al Byrne, (434) 263-4484 or This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 
< Prev   Next >
V3 Issue 2
Best viewed with:
Get Firefox!