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Monday, October 4, 2010

A Growing Demand for Medical Marihuana

united-statesIf Melanie Barniskis doesn’t take her medicine each night, chances are she won’t be able to walk the next day. “Without it, I can’t get out of bed to get the day started,” said Barniskis, 54, of Phoenix. “When there is a pain flare, it’s as if someone is driving two red-hot pokers into my feet and lower calves.”
To ease the pain, Barniskis, a former 9-1-1 emergency dispatcher for the Bethel Police Department in Alaska, drinks a tincture of marijuana or munches a “medible” — a baked goodie containing pot.
Barniskis is one of more than 36,000 medical marijuana cardholders in Oregon and 4,000 in Jackson County who use marijuana to treat pain, nausea, cancer symptoms and other ailments.
But Barniskis, who has been diagnosed with bilateral peripheral neuropathy, a condition that fills her lower extremities with acute pain, said the limitations in the current system make it difficult for her to meet her medical marijuana needs.
That’s why she supports Measure 74 on the Nov. 2 ballot, which would create a state-regulated supply system for adults through nonprofit medical marijuana dispensaries. It would provide a backup in the event she runs out of her legal stash, she said.
“Last year I had a grower and harvested a pound and a half of usable marijuana in November — I’ve been eking it out to last until this year’s harvest,” she said, noting she’s tried numerous other medicines with no relief and too many negative side effects.
She’s been using medical marijuana since moving to Southern Oregon two years ago. Her husband, Roger Blakesley, 58, who also has a medical marijuana card, is growing it for both of them this year.
“At least 30 percent of the people who have gotten (medical marijuana) cards are out of luck when they need to buy legal cannabis,” she said. “So they get it off the street — the black market.”
Under Measure 74, medical marijuana dispensaries would be regulated by the Department of Human Services. Growers and dispensaries would pay a 10 percent fee on all income plus a $1,000 and $2,000 annual licensing fee, respectively, to fund the program. It also would provide assistance for low-income cardholders to obtain medical marijuana.
Opponents worry the measure is too vague, leaving it up to administrators to decide the maximum number of dispensaries, penalties for infractions and record-keeping requirements. Nearly half the members of a state Citizens’ Initiative Review panel worried the increased availability of marijuana would invite illegal activity and concluded that Measure 74 is a “thinly veiled attempt to legalize marijuana (and) has a high probability of being abused.”
To see the full report, go to: http://www.mailtribune.com/measuringmarijuana
Proponents say the measure might not be perfect, but it addresses the major problem with the current system: lack of a reliable supply.
“Measure 74 is the only thing that is going to keep our medical marijuana law functioning as it should,” Barniskis said. “Passage would ease up on that constant fear of running out of medicine. It would provide safe, reliable places for people to go for their medicine.”
Bob Wolfe of Oregon Healthcare Consulting, a patient advocacy group based in Portland, said the number of patients seeking legal marijuana for medicinal purposes in Oregon far exceeds the legal supply.
“This measure will definitely help patients who can’t get medical marijuana now except through the black market,” he said. “The last thing you want is grandma stricken with cancer buying from a gang member.”
Measure 74 proponents say the amount of legal weed being grown in the state is about 30 percent less than the demand by cardholders.
Under the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act, approved by voters in 1998, cardholders must grow their own medical marijuana or have it grown for them by a licensed grower. A legal grower may provide six mature marijuana plants, 18 starts or seedlings and 24 ounces of usable marijuana each for up to four people.
With Measure 74, each dispensary or grower may possess 24 mature marijuana plants, 72 starts or seedlings and 6 pounds of usable marijuana. However, those amounts could be changed by administrative rule.
Unlike a law enacted in California in 1996 that left licensing to local governments, Measure 74 specifically instructs the state to license and monitor dispensaries.
The measure has been endorsed by the likes of former Oregon Supreme Court Justice and Gov. Betty Roberts, former Portland Police Chief and Mayor Tom Potter, and former federal prosecutor Kristine Olson, who was the U.S. attorney for the District of Oregon.
It is supported by the Oregon chapter of National Organization of the Reform of Marijuana Laws, Voter Power, Oregon Green Free and Pro-Oregon, all nonprofit marijuana advocacy groups.
Anthony Johnson, a co-chief petitioner and co-author of the measure, says the central goal is to improve the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act.
“Having to turn to the black market is risky business for anyone, let alone a sick patient,” he said. “Too many patients now are being forced to go without medical care.
“The program would also be self-funding, and it would generate millions in revenue for Oregon health programs,” he added.
The state agency would closely monitor and regulate the program, he said, adding that administrative adjustments would be made as needed with input from legislators and others.
Back in Phoenix, Melanie Barniskis said she didn’t ever anticipate she would be using marijuana for pain relief. Before moving to Alaska, she had been a high school English teacher in New Jersey.
The problems with her lower extremities began in 2005 in Alaska when she developed deep sores that opened up on both feet, causing nerve damage, she said. The cause of the ailment was never specifically diagnosed, she said.
“They had me on all the regular narcotics available,” she said. “But none of it was effective. And the side effects of some were worse than the actual pain.”
As the 9-1-1 operator for Bethel police for four years, she had to be alert, she said, noting that at night the emergency dispatcher did double duty, serving the Alaska state troopers. Bethel is a remote town about 400 air miles west of Anchorage at the mouth of the Yukon River.
“I couldn’t work if my mind was fogged out,” she said, referring to the side effects of pain pills prescribed by medical doctors. “At night, we covered an area about the size of Oregon.”
Because of health reasons, the couple moved to Southern Oregon, where she began researching the medicinal properties of marijuana. It provided the relief she sought, she said.
Now they have a dozen marijuana plants growing in their backyard. Each one is tagged appropriately.
“We wanted to make sure everything is totally legal,” she stressed, adding, “I never thought I’d be doing this. But the pain limits my mobility. The medicinal marijuana is extremely effective to stop the pain.”
The administrative assistant at Ashland Alternative Health said she consumes the medical pot each evening when she gets home from work.
“The evening is when the pain is at its worst,” she said.
Unless she takes her marijuana medication, the pain keeps her awake nights, making it impossible for her to work the next day, she said.
“I’ve gone from law enforcement to becoming a medicinal cannabis user,” she said. “I’ve seen both sides. I can’t deny there is abuse.
“But I’ve been converted into a complete believer because I know it alleviates my pain,” she added.
Source: Mail Tribune, The (Medford, OR)
Author: Paul Fattig
Published: October 3, 2010
Copyright: 2010 The Mail Tribune
Contact: letters@mailtribune.com
Website: http://www.mailtribune.com/

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