Pubdate: Sat, 09 Nov 2002
Source: Curry Coastal Pilot (OR)
Copyright: 2002 Western Communications, Inc
Contact:  http://www.currypilot.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1721
Author: David Courtland, Pilot Staff Writer
Cited: http://www.somm-net.org/ (Southern Oregon Medical Marijuana Network)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

MEDICAL MARIJUANA CONNECTION GROWING IN CURRY COUNTY

When Bob Walker decided two-and-a-half years ago to organize a support 
network for members of Oregon's medical marijuana program, he found doctors 
he spoke to were unwilling to cooperate.

"I talked to absolutely every doctor in Curry County, including mine," said 
Walker, who is popularly known as Brother Bob. "They all had the same 
right-wing attitude, that marijuana didn't have any medicinal value."

That made it difficult to get patient records released so Walker could 
verify they were eligible for the program, launched after voters approved 
the Oregon Medical Marijuana Act in 1998.

But as a growing number of patients with debilitating illnesses asked their 
doctors to let them try medicinal marijuana, physicians have become more 
accepting and less skeptical.

"They just had to figure out that I was totally legal," said Walker, whose 
Southern Oregon Medical Marijuana Network (SOMM-NET) is a registered 
non-profit group.

Walker says he has just added 29 more patients to the network, which has 
grown to about 230 permitted cardholders with illnesses ranging from 
multiple sclerosis to juvenile arthritis.

"When a program like this first starts, you've got to get the numbers," 
said Walker. "People have been lied to for so long, they don't know what to 
expect.

"Now they figure, Brother Bob's not going to go away."

The retired commercial fisherman regularly introduces patients to viewers 
of his weekly half-hour cable TV program, which airs on Wednesdays at 8 
p.m. on KBSC-TV (Charter Cable's channel 9).

A cardholder himself, the 62-year-old Walker is permitted to grow plants 
for treatment of his heart disease - specifically, the paralysis and 
seizures that come with it.

Walker's network is designed to guide a patient through the entire process 
of getting a permit to grow medical marijuana, then helping them put it to use.

An applicant is faxed a form to authorize release of their medical records 
to Walker, who checks them to see if the person has a qualifying 
debilitating disease.

"Over two-and-a-half years I've gotten as good at reading records as any 
doctor," said Walker. "It's common sense, anyone could do it."

After Walker has confirmed the nature of the person's illness, they are 
referred to a clinic where a nurse practitioner gives them a physical 
examination.

The results of the exam and other paperwork are recorded in triplicate - 
copies are sent to the state, the person's doctor and one is kept by the 
clinic - with the approved application and a $150 money order, the state's 
fee for the permit.

Oregon's Department of Health, which operates the medical marijuana 
program, doesn't refer applicants to medical doctors or osteopaths, the 
only people who can legally approve a permit.

Thus SOMM-NET's applicants get their permits approved by Dr. Phillip 
Leveque, the retired osteopath who has authorized most of the medical 
marijuana applications in Oregon since 1998.

Dr. Leveque visited Curry County for a clinic last weekend. Walker, who 
says he has had no problems with law enforcement, says the location of the 
clinic's is nonetheless kept on a need-to-know basis to avoid harassment of 
Leveque and others.

Once they are given a permit, the patient or their caregiver become 
responsible for getting seeds and growing the plants - the state doesn't 
offer any help with that.

Patients are allowed to grow up to seven plants, but only three can be 
budding. They aren't allowed to have more than an ounce of smokeable 
marijuana in their possession.

That's where the network again comes in handy, as patients give each other 
advice on how to grow and harvest their own plants, or share extra 
marijuana when they find themselves with more than allowed.

Nancie MacEachern, a cardholder who got her permit before Walker had 
SOMM-NET organized, said she was on her own when she got her permit in 1999.

"I was just kind of lucky," said MacEachern, who uses marijuana to keep the 
symptoms of her multiple sclerosis in check. "I put out the word I had a 
permit, and I found two plants on my porch one morning."

MacEachern said her condition improved dramatically after she stopped 
taking a myriad of prescription pills and followed her husband's advice to 
look into medical marijuana.

"He's the one who clipped an ad out of a newspaper and said 'you should 
really think about this,'" recalled MacEachern, whose doctor told her 
recently he couldn't continue authorizing her permit for fear of losing his 
Medicare eligibility.

"At 59 years old, I had never taken an illegal drug," said MacEachern.

"If I have to do it illegally now, I think that would be my right to live."
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D