http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,30380,00.html
Wednesday, July 25, 2001
PORTLAND, Oregon — Dr. Phillip
Leveque looks more like a Norman Rockwell country doctor than a man embroiled
in drug controversy.
The jovial 78-year-old osteopath
has approved more than 900 requests to grow medical marijuana, which is
allowed by the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act of 1999. The law allows patients
suffering from severe pain, seizures and other chronic conditions to grow
their own marijuana with physician approval.
Roughly 2,200 Oregonians have obtained
permits to grow marijuana since the law went into effect. And more than
40 percent of those patients were approved by a single physician: Dr. Leveque.
"I have signed over 900 [applications
to grow marijuana] now," Dr. Leveque said. "The next person signed 71."
With his prolific approvals, Dr.
Leveque has developed a reputation as the "go to" physician for patients
seeking medical marijuana. He receives referrals from advocacy groups and
even hosts his own TV show on public access cable.
But Dr. Leveque's high profile has
drawn sharp criticism from anti-drug advocates.
"The biggest concern about what Dr.
Leveque might be doing is over-prescribing," said David Westbrook, who
directs a help line for the drug abuse prevention group Oregon Partnership.
Such concerns have prompted the Oregon
Board of Medical Examiners to investigate Dr. Leveque's practice.
"I deny vociferously that I am lenient,"
said Dr. Leveque. "I am going exactly by the law of the Oregon Medical
Marijuana Act."
Dr. Leveque said the problem is not
that he is too indulgent, but that other doctors are too strict. Less than
550 of the state's 7,000 doctors have signed any patient application forms
to grow medical marijuana.
"They're afraid of George W. Bush
and the DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration]," Dr. Leveque said. "They're
also afraid of the Oregon Board of Medical Examiners in this particular
state."
But the doctor's critics say there
are plenty of good reasons to be cautious. Because patients grow their
own marijuana, the drug can vary in potency and there is no recommended
dosage. The thought of doctors encouraging cancer patients to smoke creates
an ironic twist.
"You see more tar coming from a joint
or marijuana cigarette than you do from a tobacco cigarette. So, this leads
to bronchitis, asthma, and there are carcinogens in it as well," Westbrook
said.
Dr. Leveque insists he is following
the mandate of Oregon's voters, who approved the Medical Marijuana Act
in a 1998 referendum. But critics say public opinion and medical expertise
do not always go hand in hand.
Ultimately, Dr. Leveque's peers will
decide whether what he is doing is public service or reefer madness.
By Jonathan Serrie