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Pot researcher abruptly fired by University of Arizona Options
 
SnozzleBerry
#1 Posted : 7/2/2014 4:47:16 AM

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The University of Arizona has abruptly fired a prominent marijuana researcher who only months ago received rare approval from federal drug officials to study the effects of pot on patients suffering from post traumatic stress disorder.

The firing of Suzanne A. Sisley, a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry, puts her research in jeopardy and has sparked indignation from medical marijuana advocates.



FOR THE RECORD

July 1, 1:16 p.m.: An earlier version of this post misidentified the department where Suzanne Sisley is a clinical assistant professor. It is the psychiatry department, not the psychology department.


Evan Halper

Sisley charges she was fired after her research – and her personal political crusading – created unwanted attention for the university from legislative Republicans who control its purse strings.

“This is a clear political retaliation for the advocacy and education I have been providing the public and lawmakers,” Sisley said. “I pulled all my evaluations and this is not about my job performance.”

University officials declined to explain why Sisley’s contract was not renewed, but objected to her characterization.

“The university has received no political pressure to terminate any employee,” said Chris Sigurdson, a university spokesman. He said the university embraces research of medical marijuana, noting that it supported a legislative measure in 2013 permitting such studies to be done on state campuses.

On Friday, Sisley received letters from the university informing her that her relationship with the school will be terminated as of Sept. 26. The letters offered no explanation beyond citing university guidelines which permit the administration to end its relationship with contract employees.

“In accordance with those policies, my decision is final and is not subject to further administrative review,” said a memo emailed to Sisley from Stuart Flynn, dean of the university’s College of Medicine.

In March, the National Institute on Drug Abuse moved to approve Sisley's research. The decision came as a surprise because some researchers have long accused the institute of hostility to proposals aimed at examining the possible health benefits of marijuana.

The approval authorized Sisley to obtain marijuana from a government-run farm in Mississippi for a study that was long ago given a green light by the Food and Drug Administration.

Activists said the decision reflected a shift in thinking by the Obama administration and gave hope to other scientists who have had difficulty getting authorization to study how the drug might be employed more effectively to treat patients.

But back in Arizona, the research plan disturbed some important figures.

Sisley’s study was designed to involve veterans who would use marijuana in an observation facility on campus. She had lobbied state lawmakers for approval to use state funds collected at medical marijuana dispensaries to help pay for the work. When a powerful Republican senator maneuvered to block that money, some of Sisley’s allies launched an unsuccessful recall effort.

Sisley said she did not get involved, but that university officials were irate when some activists she described as “overzealous” put the university logo on one of their political flyers. Sisley said a university vice president ordered her to draft a statement outlining all her political activism, which she did.

“I didn’t even support the recall,” Sisley said. “I thought it was a waste of energy.”

Sisley still has the option of pursuing her research at another university, if she can get a faculty position -- a possibility she is pessimistic about.

“Any university president is going to worry about taking me on,” she said. “Especially at a public university, where you have to rely on the good graces of the Legislature. These lawmakers hate me.”

Even if she gets another position, the firing will set back her study. In addition to federal approvals, Sisley had to work for months to persuade the university’s independent research board to sanction her investigation. That process would start anew if she takes her project elsewhere.

“This is just going to delay everything for a year or two,” she said. “It is just another awful delay for this study.”

Officials at the American Civil Liberties Union and the Multidisciplinary Assn. for Psychedelic Studies, a California-based organization which has sponsored Sisley’s marijuana research, are exploring options for fighting the university’s move.

“What happened here is the repression of science for political purposes,” said Rick Doblin, president of the psychedelic studies association. “It is astonishing in this day and age."


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Nathanial.Dread
#2 Posted : 7/2/2014 5:33:26 AM

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*incoherent frothing rage*
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anon_003
#3 Posted : 7/2/2014 11:42:27 PM

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Parshvik Chintan
#4 Posted : 7/3/2014 12:23:08 AM

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at this point the lunacy is so ubiquitous i find it hard to get agitated/excited.
when legislative sanity isn't absurdly rare, i might start getting shocked again.
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112233
#5 Posted : 7/3/2014 12:32:27 AM

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These are the last, utterly, hilariously futile attempts to stop the dominoes from falling. It's all quite amusing to watch.

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null24
#6 Posted : 7/3/2014 2:27:30 AM

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Maybe she could get a position at a university in another ( ahem, more tolerant, open minded, less fascist) state besides Arizona. Its notoriously anti marijuana.

Maybe a state like CO or WA, or OR.
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proto-pax
#7 Posted : 7/5/2014 2:34:17 PM

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null24 wrote:
Maybe she could get a position at a university in another ( ahem, more tolerant, open minded, less fascist) state besides Arizona. Its notoriously anti marijuana.

Maybe a state like CO or WA, or OR.


Absolutely will not happen. Researchers are under extreme pressure to publish results; there income (at least atR1 institutions which ASU is) depends on it and not in a they get fired if they don't publish sense. the money they make comes from grants they recieve.

There are also hundreds of other applicants that don't have a black mark on their record. This is effectively career destroying and 100% political (for a uni to fire someone with funding in this economic climate?) Shame on ASU and the lack of spine they have .
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endlessness
#8 Posted : 7/5/2014 2:56:34 PM

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It might well be a political retaliation kind of thing but we´re only hearing one side of the argument though, a lot of speculation but no word from the other side of the story. I´d like to hear what the university dean has to say.
 
obliguhl
#9 Posted : 7/6/2014 10:01:01 AM

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Quote:
I´d like to hear what the university dean has to say.


"This is based on policies. It is final."

I would assume they know that it is carreer destroying and would like to deter further researchers to take the risk and study MM.

Jsut good to know, that there are almost no people suffering from PTSD in the US.
 
Entheogenerator
#10 Posted : 7/6/2014 11:06:08 PM

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obliguhl wrote:
Jsut good to know, that there are almost no people suffering from PTSD in the US.
Ha, yea... Good thing. Confused
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--Shadow
#11 Posted : 7/11/2014 4:00:08 AM

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out there
#12 Posted : 7/12/2014 4:20:21 AM

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What I would like to see is a large group of ASU students protesting this on campus. What I expect to see is a continuance of the status quo. Today's youth are more interested in securing a job after graduation than standing up for what is right. The state of the economy and a very scary paradigm shift has produced a much more materialistic outlook among students.
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hixidom
#13 Posted : 7/13/2014 11:19:26 PM
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In an ideal world, she could just go work for the institution that gave her the money to do the research in the first place. For some reason a university is required as a middle-man for her research.
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wearepeople
#14 Posted : 7/16/2014 11:27:58 PM

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Ohhhhhhh Arizona.....So beautiful but so crazy.

According to ASU's website:
Quote:
86.9% of ASU students do not smoke marijuana.

https://eoss.asu.edu/wellness/drugs/marijuana

Sounds like 86.9% of ASU students lie on surveys.


On the good side, here are two talks their hosting about Medical Marijuana:
http://cabhp.asu.edu/eve...on-research-to-practice
http://cabhp.asu.edu/eve...lic-health-implications


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