Pubdate: Sun, 02 Feb 2014 Source: Daily Citizen, The (Dalton, GA) Copyright: 2014 Daily Citizen Contact: http://daltondailycitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1929 Author: Charles Oliver MEDICAL MARIJUANA GAINING SUPPORT IN GEORGIA For the past four months, Sarah Callaway has had to watch as her daughter Greylynn's body has been wracked by uncontrollable spasms several times a day. "They don't hurt her. But they scare her, and she cries. And you can't do anything for her except comfort her," said Callaway, a Chatsworth resident. "That's the most frustrating part. I just say to her, 'I'm sorry I can't do anything for you. I'm sorry.'" When Greylynn was born six months ago, doctors diagnosed her with a brain malformation and gave her only weeks to live. She survived, but her condition has left her with a form of epilepsy called infantile spasms. She's currently on two different anti-seizure medications, one of which could possibly leave her blind. But they only control the spasms. They don't stop them. Sarah Callaway and her relatives have researched the issue and talked to other parents of children with seizure disorders, and she said she has found that some children have seen dramatic improvements when treated with cannabis oil. "It has been known to help babies with what my daughter has," she said. Cannabis oil is sometimes referred to as a form of medical marijuana. But Callaway said that calling it medical marijuana might give people the wrong impression of how it works, since the oil is very low in THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the compound that gets people high. "It doesn't make you high. But it stops the seizures, and it would help her have the best quality of life she can. These children deserve that. Why would you not do something that would help them have a better quality of life?" she said. Cannabis oil, like most other products from the cannabis plant, is currently illegal in Georgia. But last week, state Rep. Allen Peake, R-Macon, introduced a bill that would allow the state's medical colleges to dispense the oil to those with seizure disorders. Some 80 of the 180 members of the state House of Representatives have already signed onto the bill. Among them is state Rep. John Meadows, R-Calhoun, chairman of the powerful Rules Committee. "As a parent, I know that I would do anything that I could to stop my child from suffering," Meadows said. Meadows said many lawmakers understand that feeling and that's why this issue has emerged so quickly. He said it has also helped that Peake tailored the bill so narrowly, allaying any fears that legalizing medical marijuana could increase recreational use. "We aren't talking about rolling a joint and smoking it. We aren't talking about marijuana stores in every city," he said. Rep. Tom Dickson, R-Cohutta, has also signed onto the bill. "If you've read the emails we have gotten from parents who have children with seizure disorders that this can treat, I couldn't understand how you wouldn't be in favor of it," Dickson said. "The bill has been very carefully crafted so it won't increase recreational use of marijuana. It deals only with a derivative with a very high medicinal value. It doesn't provide access to any kind of smokable marijuana. It won't create any marijuana stores." Dalton resident Sheli Gillley has been staying with her daughter Zoe in an Atlanta hospital for the past three weeks, but that hasn't stopped her from contacting lawmakers and urging them to support Peake's bill. Zoe, 7, suffers from a mitochondrial disease as well as Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, both of which cause seizures. She's currently being treated with three different seizure medicines as well as an implant and a special diet. "But we still have multiple seizures daily," Gillley said. "Yesterday, we had about 20." While Zoe has not been treated with cannabis oil, Gillley said she has talked to the mother of one girl who has. "They are seeing astounding results," she said. "They went from having 400 (seizures) a week to one a month. She says she hasn't heard of one case where there hasn't been a dramatic reduction in seizures. Sometimes, they have stopped completely. Plus they are able to come off their medications. That has such an improvement on their cognitive functions. They are basically coming out of a fog." Doctors back measure Parents have been joined by many doctors in supporting Peake's bill. In fact, the Medical Association of Georgia backs the bill. "We've heard some very compelling testimony from physicians who have had success in treating children with severe seizures with (cannabis oil)," said Dalton family practice physician John Antalis, a past president of the medical association. "This has allowed those children to get off some very toxic seizure medications." Antalis said the medical association does not support the sort of broad legalization of marijuana that many other states have enacted, which some fear could lead to an increase in recreational use. "They are in favor of a very limited, monitored program," he said. "It will be regulated and studied through a university system and that people can acquire it only through one of these programs." State Sen. Charlie Bethel, R-Dalton, said that the support of the medical community is important if the bill is to pass. "For me personally, and I believe for the Senate, we want to hear what doctors say," he said. "From what I have been told, this is something that is approved by the (federal Food and Drug Administration). But if there's a consensus among doctors that this is something that could help patients, we should give it consideration." Antalis notes that medical marijuana has actually been legal in Georgia since the early 1980s. That's when a state law created a process that would allow patients to apply to join studies on the use of marijuana to treat glaucoma and cancer. But that law counted on the federal government to provide that marijuana. It did not, and the board that oversees that program has been inactive for most of the past two decades. Peake's bill would expand that program to seizure disorders. Peake has said he believes the state can acquire cannabis oil from dealers in states such as Colorado, which have legalized marijuana for medicinal and recreational use. State Rep. Bruce Broadrick, R-Dalton, said he has questions about whether the state can acquire cannabis oil. "I've told Allen that I share his passion. I'm generally supportive of his proposal. With these kids with these types of seizures, we are very limited in what we can do for them," said Broadrick, a pharmacist. "But I still have a lot of questions about logistics as far as acquiring the product and bringing it into the state, what confidence we have in the people producing it, how it's going to be standardized, how it's going to be prescribed, how it's going to be distributed." Lawmakers will probably work out some of those questions as the bill makes its way through the General Assembly. Others they may leave to the state medical board if the bill passes. Sarah Callaway said she believes that if lawmakers look into cannabis oil and the promise it holds they will approve the bill. "I wish that every representative in the state would come and spend a day with one of these children and see what they go through," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt