Pubdate: Thu, 15 May 2014 Source: Times-Tribune, The (Scranton PA) Copyright: 2014 Townnews.com Contact: http://www.thetimes-tribune.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4440 Author: Jan Hefler, the Philadelphia Inquirer Page: C8 POT KILLS PAIN The Garden State's Experience With Medical Marijuana EGG HARBOR TWP., N.J. - Before buying cannabis at southern New Jersey's only medical-marijuana dispensary, patients must circle one of six animated faces that stare out from a clipboard. The row of smiling, wincing, frowning and sobbing cartoon faces is being used to rank the degree of pain that patients experience due to cancer, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and several other conditions the state deems treatable by cannabis. When the patients return to the Compassionate Care Foundation dispensary in Egg Harbor Twp., N.J., for a refill, they again are handed the Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale so that the effect of the marijuana can be assessed. 'Dramatic' results The results so far are "absolutely dramatic," said Suzanne Miller, a researcher with a Ph.D. who sits on the dispensary's board of trustees. Dr. Miller is also the director of behavioral medicine at Fox Chase Cancer Center/ Temple Health in Philadelphia. About 80 percent of the 145 CCF patients who completed the rankings at least twice over the last two months have charted significant improvement, she said. The data show that on average, most patients are reporting their pain levels decreased by 30 to 50 percent, Dr. Miller said. "You usually see smaller results, about 10 percent, or 20 percent," she said. An author of four books and a contributor to more than 100 academic articles, Dr. Miller will be the lead researcher on a report she plans to submit to medical journals for publication this fall. The dispensary has 600 registered patients and expects to have more data by that time. $428 an ounce On a gloomy, wet morning l ast week, several patients walked into the dispensary to purchase cannabis, which is packaged in plastic bottles and sold at $428 an ounce. Two patients who agreed to be interviewed said the marijuana they bought had changed their lives. Three other patients who were reached by phone said it markedly eased their pain. Bill Thomas, the dispensary CEO, said those afflicted with seizures, multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome, and glaucoma are reporting the greatest benefit. One patient who had Crohn's disease experienced a "total reversal" and was able to return to work, he said. Because there is a dearth of scientific studies, anecdotal evidence is practically the only proof available at this time, Mr. Thomas said. Marijuana's status as a federally prohibited drug has blocked studies on its medicinal value, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom