Also in 1999, Health Canada created the Medical Marijuana Research Program (MMRP); slowly, Canada's laws for medicinal marijuana began to change.

-April 1999 survey shows 78% percent support the medicinal use of the plant.
-May 10th - judge grants AIDS patient Jim Wakeford an interim constitutional exemption for possession and cultivation
-May 25th - House of Commons passes amended medicinal marijuana motion: "the government should takes steps immediately concerning the possible legal medical use of marijuana including... clinical trials, appropriate guidelines for medical use, as well as access to a safe medicinal supply..."
-June 9th - Minister of Health announces clinical trials program; individuals who successfully apply to Health Canada are exempt from criminal prosecution
-October 6th - 14 more individuals receive special exemptions to use marijuana for medicinal purposes.
-September 2000 - Federal Minister of Health announces government will be growing medicinal marijuana and federal regulations will be made into law
-January 2001 - Ontario court declares the law banning cultivation of medicinal marijuana is unconstitutional
-April 2001 - Health Canada announces proposed regulation for tightly regulated access to medicinal marijuana
-August 2001 - Health Canada MMAR (Marijuana Medical Access Regulations) go into affect; Canada becomes the first country allowing legal possession of medicinal marijuana

Since 2001, there has been a steady uphill climb for sufferers of many chronic and terminal diseases. A year after marijuana became legal for medical use, the Canadian Senate began pushing for MMAR reform - buy marijuana online usa. Others pushed for ways to legally obtain marijuana without having to grow it themselves; many sufferers, such as those with MS, were unable to grow the plant due to poor health.

In 2003, the Ontario Court of Appeal began to force changes to the MMAR. One of these changes included providing reasonable access through sanctioned providers of a legal marijuana supply.

Over the last seven years, scientists have delved deeper into the potential of medicinal marijuana for use in treating illnesses. In some cases, cannabinoids have shown the potential of being able to help cure a few diseases, which had been thought to be incurable. At the time of this writing, medicinal marijuana and the cannabinoids it contains has been used in research for many diseases, including cancer, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and Crohn's disease, among others.

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