HAL BROWN: Medical marijuana could have eased wife’s pain

“My only direct personal experience with the effectiveness of medical marijuana was when my wife was dying of cancer and was on chemo. Without going deeply into details, her life became a living hell as death became imminent.
 

She was very resistant when a friend tried to persuade her to try some marijuana, which he said he could get from his son (a responsible recreational user with a good job, wife, and family). When her Dana Farber oncologist didn’t tell her NOT to try it (being reluctant to tell her TO try it, let’s call it a wink and an affirmative nod), she agreed.

She did so once, and the results were amazing. She had six full hours where her debilitating symptoms were significantly relieved. The severe persistent nausea which plagued her, despite being on three anti-nausea drugs, disappeared. Even so, she refused to try it again. She toughed it out until the end, which was a brutal four days at Brigham and Women’s, as even the strongest pain medication had no effect.

I have little doubt that eventually the chemicals which can relieve diseases and symptoms will be synthesized, and be approved as prescription medications.

Until then, it seems to me that the good of making medical marijuana available for those who get a doctor’s prescription outweighs the bad.

I think almost everyone who has had a loved one suffer with an illness which makes life unbearable, and for which marijuana would help, would agree with me. We need to deal with drug abuse aggressively in Middleboro; but making sick people pay the price for drug abusers by withholding treatment for people truly in need seems cruel and insensitive.

I urge anyone who disagrees with me to read this article from the American Cancer Society website.”

http://www.enterprisenews.com/newsnow/x1343094540/COMMENTARY-Medical-marijuana-could-have-eased-wife-s-pain

Doctor: Marijuana is a needed option

Dr. Blick sits in the pharmacy at the Circle Care Center in Norwalk, Conn.  Along with synthetic medications, Dr. Blick looks forward to utilizing the benefits of medical marijuana for patients with a variety of medical conditions including cancer, glaucoma and HIV/AIDS. Photo: Autumn Driscoll / Connecticut Post

“There was a personal reason why Dr. Gary Blick became one of the nearly 100 physicians in the state who are licensed to prescribe medical marijuana.”I did this because my 91-year-old mother, who has glaucoma,” he said. “Her glaucoma eye drops had failed to produce the desired results and she was facing surgery.”

Glaucoma is a disease in which the eye typically has excessive internal pressure, damaging the nerve fibers of the retina, the delicate tissue at the back of the eye that’s sensitive to light and color.

“She was needing surgery to repair her eyes,” he said. “But after we started her on medical marijuana, her pressures dropped, and when she stopped smoking marijuana, the pressures went back up again.”

He said her testimony in Hartford last year had the legislative committee considering the bill “in stitches,” even though her testimony countered testimony of the president of the Connecticut Society of Eye Physicians, who said marijuana would not be helpful to glaucoma patients.

“So one of the senators said, `Are you aware of Gloria Blick‘s testimony?’ To which he replied, `Well, I guess it would help some people.’ To which the senator replied, `Isn’t that what we’re here for?’ ”

Blick sees medical marijuana as just one of the arsenal of options that physicians should have to ease pain and provide relief for various diseases.”

More: http://www.ctpost.com/local/article/Doctor-Marijuana-is-a-needed-option-4740995.php#src=fb

Rx Marijuana: Most Readers Support Use

“In one way or another, more than 80% of MedPage Today readers have a favorable opinion about medical marijuana.

A total of 60.7% of the more than 5,600 readers who voted in our survey last week indicated they have always favored medical marijuana, while another 20.4% who had previously opposed the legalization of pot as a medication indicated a change of heart (read “My Cannabis Conversion” by Dr. Sanjay Gupta).

Many readers suggested medical marijuana is a better option than the current crop of legal opiates.”

More: http://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/PublicHealth/41176

Why Pot Makes You Feel Good

“Explaining the chemistry behind medical marijuana that got Sanjay Gupta and others to finally believe.”“Last week, CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta  grabbed headlines for coming out in support of the validity of the medical use of marijuana, something he had opposed in the past. What changed his mind? …”Science”.
Here’s what he — and those studying the chemistry of marijuana — now understand.”


More: http://www.alternet.org/drugs/why-pot-makes-you-feel-good

Family: medical marijuana could help son with rare disease

 “”Everybody loves Charlie,” boasted father, Eric Byrd,”he’s just always smiling, it’s his personality, he just glows.”

Charlie Byrd looks like every little five-year-old boy and has a smile that will melt your heart. But Charlie is in a dangerous battle for his life against a rare, and even deadly, form of epilepsy called “Dravet Syndrome.”

“He keeps smiling and he doesn’t even know that he’s sick,” said Crystal Byrd, Charlie’s mother, through tears.

The Byrds say the first seizure happened when Charlie was just a few months old, the second came just a few months later when he was six months old. From there the hospital trips added up, as did the pain and the seizures.

“We quit counting, it had become a little hard to deal with,” stated Charlie’s mom.

The Byrds have given their only son everything they can find.

“We’ve tried numerous therapies, medicines, and nothing’s ever worked,” said Eric Byrd, “Today, he’s on four different types of anti-epileptic drugs. This morning he had two seizures in his sleep.”

The West Liberty family even started the young boy on medicine from other countries after doing research. Along the way they connected with other families with children battling “Dravet Syndrome.”

One case stands above the rest. Crystal Byrd pointed to a girl in Colorado who seems to have found a strong remedy, “The child went from 300 seizures to one a week, and sometimes the one-a-week doesn’t even come.”

The medicine, though, is only legal in 19 states and Kentucky isn’t one of them.

“It was the medical marijuana, the CBDs,” answered Crystal.

CBD, or cannabidiol, isn’t like other forms of marijuana, as Crystal explained, she’s not giving her son a cigarette. Instead, she said it can come in the form of an oil or even pill.

“He won’t be high from it, it doesn’t have the taboo marijuana association with it,” she said.

Still, the topic of legalizing marijuana even in medical cases has been, at times, controversial. Yet, it is on the table for politicians to consider in a Wednesday meeting in Frankfort. According to the agenda, advocates for medicinal marijuana, patients, doctors, and even a former narcotics officer will speak before a committee of state lawmakers.

The Byrds are anxious. They say if medical marijuana isn’t allowed, then they might be looking to move to a state that does allow it, like Colorado.

“I can see through conservatory, but I mean how can you look at him and not want to give him a chance?” asked Crystal Byrd.”

http://www.wkyt.com/home/headlines/Family-medical-marijuana-could-help-son-with-rare-disease-220452801.html

D.C. Councilmember: ‘Marijuana Does Not Do Harm, It’s Not A Gateway Drug’ – CBSNews

file photo of marijuana plant.  (credit: David McNew/Getty Images)

““It’s time for us to recognize that marijuana does not do harm,” said Grosso. “It’s not a gateway drug like people think it is. It’s not causing massive accidents or causing people to go crazy on the streets. And it’s just leading a lot of kids right to jail…””

More: http://washington.cbslocal.com/2013/07/11/d-c-councilmember-marijuana-does-not-do-harm-its-not-a-gateway-drug/

MYTH: Marijuana Is a “Gateway” Drug – CBSNews

MYTH: Marijuana Is a “Despite anti-drug education campaigns which state marijuana is a gateway for harder drug use, new research from the University of New Hampshire says for most people that’s not true.” “But pot does serves as a “gateway,” says Dr. Karen Van Gund, associate professor of sociology., mainly for young people who are poor, unemployed, and subjected to severe psychological stress. In other words, the path to other drugs is not necessarily the pot, but rather the potholes young people encounter on the road.”

Pot smokers skinnier than non-tokers, study says – NBCNews

“We’re all familiar with the stereotype of the typical pot smoker — a lumpy, lazy couch potato with one hand wrapped around the remote and the other elbow-deep in a bag of nacho cheese Doritos.

But new research out of France gives a different spin to the stereotypical stoner.

“Cannabis is supposed to increase appetite,” says Dr. Yann Le Strat, a psychiatrist at Louis-Mourier Hospital in Colombes, France and co-author of a new study in the American Journal of Epidemiology. “So we hypothesized that cannabis users would be more likely to have higher weight than non-users and be more likely to be obese.”

Instead, Le Strat and his colleagues found just the opposite.

“We found that cannabis users are less likely to be obese than non-users,” he says. “We were so surprised, we thought we had [made] a mistake. Or that our results were due to the sample we studied. So we turned to another completely independent sample and found exactly the same association…”

“I know when we think about smoking pot, one of the jokes is that it gives you the munchies and dry mouth so you drink a bunch of water and eat a bunch of Cheetos,” she says.

“Maybe we need to adjust the stereotype.””

More: http://www.nbcnews.com/health/pot-smokers-skinnier-non-tokers-study-says-1C6437141