News (Media Awareness Project) - US MT: Just What The Doctor Ordered |
Title: | US MT: Just What The Doctor Ordered |
Published On: | 2010-05-30 |
Source: | Helena Independent Record (MT) |
Fetched On: | 2010-06-01 00:50:41 |
PATIENTS IN PAIN DRAW DISTINCTION BETWEEN USING MEDICAL MARIJUANA &
SMOKING POT
Just What The Doctor Ordered
She began with hydrocodone for the pain, Cymbalta and Trazodone for
the depression, and Flexeril to ease the muscle spasms. The drugs
helped sooth the nagging discomfort in her back. On good days, they
dulled the pain in her legs.
But while Barb Trego got by, she wasn't happy. The physical toll of
her condition, which includes two missing discs in her back,
fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue, left her life in disarray, and for
that, the drugs were of little use.
"They were just giving me the pain pills and muscle relaxers 60 at a
time," said Trego, who now lives in Helena. "It just makes you not
care about anything. My house fell into disarray. I let all my
houseplants die. I was on so many narcotics, my life was going on, but
I wasn't participating in it."
Trego, a former reserve sheriff's deputy and employee with the
Department of Corrections, hadn't worked since 1995. Although she was
not yet 55 years old, it seemed her life was coming to an end before
it really got going.
But two months after getting a medical marijuana card, Trego now
manages the semblance of a smile. The drug was recommended by a friend
and has, Trego says, made a big difference in her life.
"I'm working a part-time job," she said. "I'm able to help my friends
instead of them all coming to help me. I sleep better at night. I'm
getting my house clean. I'm enjoying things again I thought were lost
forever."
Trego is one of nearly 15,000 Montana citizens with a medical
marijuana card. Some 62 percent of Montana voters approved the use of
marijuana for medical use back in 2004, giving the likes of Trego an
option in their choice of drug.
But some lawmakers are taking a hard look at the state's medical
marijuana law, saying the current system of controlling prescription
pot is broken and needs fixing. Not all 15,000 Montana cardholders are
legitimate patients, they say, and it's those who abuse the system
that they're looking to weed out with tougher regulations.
Among those with an eye on fixing what they see as a broken law are
Republican state Sens. Dave Lewis of Helena and Jim Shockley of Victor.
Two weeks ago, Lewis announced a plan to license a single statewide
marijuana grower and dispense the drug through licensed pharmacies.
The result would create a system not unlike Montana's liquor
distribution laws, Lewis said, with the state controlling the supply.
"I don't want to take it away from those who really need it," Lewis
said. "I want to make sure it's still available to people with a true
medical need. But it's become widely available, and I absolutely
believe that not everyone with a card has a legitimate need."
After Lewis' proposal hit the papers, his phone began ringing and his
inbox filled with e-mails. In three short days, he said, he received
more than 300 messages from both sides of the issue and more calls
than he could answer.
"I heard immediately from the industry, the growers and the
retailers," he said. "Then I started hearing from the general public.
A lot of people aren't happy. They supported it before, but now they
feel like they've been taken advantage of."
Shockley has requested a bill to be drafted for the 2011 Legislature
to repeal the marijuana law.
Shockley said he believes marijuana has medical benefits and should
remain legal, although in a much more controlled way. But creating an
appropriately controlled medical-marijuana system was too complicated
for the initiative process, he said.
Even those who led the drive to legalize medical marijuana, including
Tom Daubert of Helena, said the current law has flaws that need to be
addressed. Daubert, who doesn't necessarily agree with the remedies
presented by Lewis, said last week that growers and dispensaries must
be monitored, and the state must look at ways of regulating the industry.
Others, including a 54-year-old Helena woman named Holly, who suffers
from a rare allergy to paraben (a chemical used in preservatives),
blame a few high-profile pot users for exploiting the law and making
it hard on those who have a legitimate claim to medical marijuana.
Holly, who's a legal card holder, asked that her last name not be used
due to a medical agreement she signed with her doctor. She got her
card from Dr. Chris Christensen in Victor, who has certified at least
3,000 patients for medical marijuana.
While Holly, a cardholder, and Lewis, a politician, have little in
common politically, they both mention the likes of Jason Crist by
name, blaming the founder of the Montana Caregivers Network in
Missoula for exploiting the law.
Crist, who has smoked publicly in front of the state Capitol, not to
mention the Missoula Police Department, says his network's clinics
have heightened the profile of medical marijuana. Crist didn't return
calls this week, but he did tell Lee Newspapers of Montana that his
sessions are not pot free-for-alls.
Others, however, see Crist's move as an in-your-face publicity stunt
that's doing little for the cause.
"It's embarrassing to the rest of us," Holly said. "He's going to
influence just enough legislators who are of the conservative variety,
and there it goes. He's being a big ass about it, and that's the kind
of people we'll be looking to weed out."
Holly holds out her arms and shows her legs, which are covered with
scars and open wounds. Pot, she says, has always helped her cope with
the pain, and she admits to smoking it long before she was legally
licensed to do so.
But now that she's older and has grown ill, Holly says the drug makes
her feel better. She says the law is still young and, because of it,
she feels legitimate card holders must be allowed to police their own
ranks and eliminate those who give marijuana a bad medical name.
"This is a young business," she said. "Give us some time. Everything
needs time to reach operating speed. I think it will
self-police."
As for Trego, she believes the growing flap surrounding medical pot is
born from misinformation. She also worries about the current wave of
bans and moratoriums that have cropped up in some Montana communities
over the past two weeks.
Too few people understand the entire picture, she says, including the
medical advantages of using the drug. That could leave a small number
of those who use pot legally fighting to overturn the stigma that
surrounds it.
"There's always people who use it constantly, or smoke it constantly
all day, but they're not using medical marijuana, they're smoking
pot," Trego said. "If the rest of us hide in the closets, it doesn't
show us as having a legitimate medical need.
"It's a legitimate medical thing, and it has helped me so much, I want
to get out there and tell other people it might help them, too."
SMOKING POT
Just What The Doctor Ordered
She began with hydrocodone for the pain, Cymbalta and Trazodone for
the depression, and Flexeril to ease the muscle spasms. The drugs
helped sooth the nagging discomfort in her back. On good days, they
dulled the pain in her legs.
But while Barb Trego got by, she wasn't happy. The physical toll of
her condition, which includes two missing discs in her back,
fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue, left her life in disarray, and for
that, the drugs were of little use.
"They were just giving me the pain pills and muscle relaxers 60 at a
time," said Trego, who now lives in Helena. "It just makes you not
care about anything. My house fell into disarray. I let all my
houseplants die. I was on so many narcotics, my life was going on, but
I wasn't participating in it."
Trego, a former reserve sheriff's deputy and employee with the
Department of Corrections, hadn't worked since 1995. Although she was
not yet 55 years old, it seemed her life was coming to an end before
it really got going.
But two months after getting a medical marijuana card, Trego now
manages the semblance of a smile. The drug was recommended by a friend
and has, Trego says, made a big difference in her life.
"I'm working a part-time job," she said. "I'm able to help my friends
instead of them all coming to help me. I sleep better at night. I'm
getting my house clean. I'm enjoying things again I thought were lost
forever."
Trego is one of nearly 15,000 Montana citizens with a medical
marijuana card. Some 62 percent of Montana voters approved the use of
marijuana for medical use back in 2004, giving the likes of Trego an
option in their choice of drug.
But some lawmakers are taking a hard look at the state's medical
marijuana law, saying the current system of controlling prescription
pot is broken and needs fixing. Not all 15,000 Montana cardholders are
legitimate patients, they say, and it's those who abuse the system
that they're looking to weed out with tougher regulations.
Among those with an eye on fixing what they see as a broken law are
Republican state Sens. Dave Lewis of Helena and Jim Shockley of Victor.
Two weeks ago, Lewis announced a plan to license a single statewide
marijuana grower and dispense the drug through licensed pharmacies.
The result would create a system not unlike Montana's liquor
distribution laws, Lewis said, with the state controlling the supply.
"I don't want to take it away from those who really need it," Lewis
said. "I want to make sure it's still available to people with a true
medical need. But it's become widely available, and I absolutely
believe that not everyone with a card has a legitimate need."
After Lewis' proposal hit the papers, his phone began ringing and his
inbox filled with e-mails. In three short days, he said, he received
more than 300 messages from both sides of the issue and more calls
than he could answer.
"I heard immediately from the industry, the growers and the
retailers," he said. "Then I started hearing from the general public.
A lot of people aren't happy. They supported it before, but now they
feel like they've been taken advantage of."
Shockley has requested a bill to be drafted for the 2011 Legislature
to repeal the marijuana law.
Shockley said he believes marijuana has medical benefits and should
remain legal, although in a much more controlled way. But creating an
appropriately controlled medical-marijuana system was too complicated
for the initiative process, he said.
Even those who led the drive to legalize medical marijuana, including
Tom Daubert of Helena, said the current law has flaws that need to be
addressed. Daubert, who doesn't necessarily agree with the remedies
presented by Lewis, said last week that growers and dispensaries must
be monitored, and the state must look at ways of regulating the industry.
Others, including a 54-year-old Helena woman named Holly, who suffers
from a rare allergy to paraben (a chemical used in preservatives),
blame a few high-profile pot users for exploiting the law and making
it hard on those who have a legitimate claim to medical marijuana.
Holly, who's a legal card holder, asked that her last name not be used
due to a medical agreement she signed with her doctor. She got her
card from Dr. Chris Christensen in Victor, who has certified at least
3,000 patients for medical marijuana.
While Holly, a cardholder, and Lewis, a politician, have little in
common politically, they both mention the likes of Jason Crist by
name, blaming the founder of the Montana Caregivers Network in
Missoula for exploiting the law.
Crist, who has smoked publicly in front of the state Capitol, not to
mention the Missoula Police Department, says his network's clinics
have heightened the profile of medical marijuana. Crist didn't return
calls this week, but he did tell Lee Newspapers of Montana that his
sessions are not pot free-for-alls.
Others, however, see Crist's move as an in-your-face publicity stunt
that's doing little for the cause.
"It's embarrassing to the rest of us," Holly said. "He's going to
influence just enough legislators who are of the conservative variety,
and there it goes. He's being a big ass about it, and that's the kind
of people we'll be looking to weed out."
Holly holds out her arms and shows her legs, which are covered with
scars and open wounds. Pot, she says, has always helped her cope with
the pain, and she admits to smoking it long before she was legally
licensed to do so.
But now that she's older and has grown ill, Holly says the drug makes
her feel better. She says the law is still young and, because of it,
she feels legitimate card holders must be allowed to police their own
ranks and eliminate those who give marijuana a bad medical name.
"This is a young business," she said. "Give us some time. Everything
needs time to reach operating speed. I think it will
self-police."
As for Trego, she believes the growing flap surrounding medical pot is
born from misinformation. She also worries about the current wave of
bans and moratoriums that have cropped up in some Montana communities
over the past two weeks.
Too few people understand the entire picture, she says, including the
medical advantages of using the drug. That could leave a small number
of those who use pot legally fighting to overturn the stigma that
surrounds it.
"There's always people who use it constantly, or smoke it constantly
all day, but they're not using medical marijuana, they're smoking
pot," Trego said. "If the rest of us hide in the closets, it doesn't
show us as having a legitimate medical need.
"It's a legitimate medical thing, and it has helped me so much, I want
to get out there and tell other people it might help them, too."
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