Pubdate: Sun, 12 Jan 2014 Source: Sunday Mail (Australia) Copyright: 2014 Queensland Newspapers Contact: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/editorial/letter Website: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/sundaymail Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/435 Author: Annika Smethurst Page: 2 I'M SO GLAD I GAVE MY KID DRUGS AN EPILEPTIC girl who was having up to 60 seizures a day and who was given only months to live has made a miraculous recovery since her mum started giving her liquid cannabis which was made in Nimbin. Doctors at one of Australia's leading hospitals have acknowledged the "remarkable improvements" in the girl's condition one year after she started taking the drug. But health representatives have warned families not to use medicinal marijuana, saying it remains illegal across Australia. Cheri O'Connell gives her eight-year-old daughter Tara a liquid form of medicinal marijuana known as THC-A - posted to her in the mail - to treat her severe epilepsy. Ms O'Connell's claims of her daughter's miracle recovery, backed by the peak medical body in her home state of Victoria, have fuelled calls for clinical trials to test the effectiveness of medicinal marijuana. "She was dying, she could barely walk or talk, was unable to toilet herself and slept a similar cycle to a newborn," Ms O'Connell said. "We had basically been told that there was not too much more we could do, just to take her home and to love her and maybe if you are lucky she'll get to nine. "We didn't see her having a future at all," she said. "Now, well she is never going to be the kid that holds a job and goes off and does everything because it's too late, the damage has been done." Tara required a wheelchair, struggled to walk and had limited speech. In January last year, her desperate parents started her on a cannabis mix, after a cocktail of prescribed medicines failed to stop the seizures. One year on Tara is a bubbly young girl and her wheelchair is collecting dust. A recent neuropsychological assessment report by a leading doctor at Austin Health said Tara's overall cognitive performances had "significantly improved". "Since commencing medical cannabis (together with the cessation of her seizures), there is a convincing clinical history of improvements in all facets of her presentation as reported by her mother," senior clinical neuropsychologist Dr Silvana Micallef wrote. An increased appetite and fatigue were the only recorded side-effects. The medical-grade marijuana is administered orally through drops under the tongue. and manufactured to be low in THC, the compound that produces a "high". The O'Connells have also started son Sean, 11, who has a less severe form of epilepsy, on liquid cannabis. Mrs O'Connell is calling for research into the drug which she claims has saved her daughter's life and is being used by at least 70 children across Australia. Kay McNeice, spokeswoman for the federal Health Department, said: "The manufacture, possession, sale or use of any form of cannabis is prohibited under state and territory drugs and poisons legislation." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt