Pubdate: Sun, 20 Mar 2016 Source: Day, The (New London,CT) Copyright: 2016 The Day Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.theday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/293 EXTEND MARIJUANA USE TO EASE CHILD SUFFERING The state legislature should pass a law legalizing the use of marijuana for patients under 18. Children who have no other options should not be denied this medicine. The worst pain a parent can imagine is the loss of a child. Almost as devastating is to watch a child suffer. If the suffering continues for a long time, or repeats over and over again, the helplessness is agonizing for parents, who would do anything to stop it. Parents of children who suffer multiple seizures a day, and with those episodes, a constant risk of further disability and death, are asking the Connecticut General Assembly to legalize the use of marijuana for patients under 18. For some children it offers relief from the brutal cycle of seizures that make school and play impossible and may steal the ability even to walk and talk. That's what's proposed in HB 5040, cosponsored by Rep. Emmett D. Riley, D-Norwich. The bill had a hearing early this month before the Joint Committee on Public Health. The General Assembly should pass the bill and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy should sign it. Normally the legislature does not get involved in what drugs may be prescribed either to children or adults. Marijuana is, however, a controlled substance, regulated by both state and federal law. The bill would amend the 2012 act that legalized marijuana prescription and use for adults. While Connecticut may amend the state prohibition, the federal laws remain in effect. U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, D- Conn., has told patients he is seeking ways to protect the state law from "onerous" federal restrictions. The purpose of the law is to allow palliative, or symptom-relieving, care. No one is claiming that marijuana use would cure the neurological problems that cause seizures nor heal the other conditions, including terminal illness and spinal cord injuries, for which the bill would extend it to minors. These children's lives remain at risk. Their health is so compromised that there is no power in the argument advanced by some legislators that marijuana's effect on a developing brain could be harmful. There can be no quality of life later if none is preserved now. Like many drugs, medicinal marijuana doesn't work for every patient. But when it does, when it decreases the frequency and severity of seizures, for example, it can alleviate the affliction and the inhumane demand that parents watch their children suffer, unable to help. On Monday, Cyndimae Meehan, 13, formerly of Montville and recently living in Maine because that state allowed marijuana treatment currently illegal in Connecticut, died quietly in her father's arms. Her parents did not know she would die so soon, but with the level of her illness it was a constant possibility. While being treated with a specific strain of marijuana oil, Cyndimae experienced fewer and less severe seizures. While they could not save their daughter, her parents' decision to treat her in Maine made the last two years of her life far better. This is not the first time the legislature faces this issue. Cyndiemae's mother, Susan Meehan, and other parents testified last session, as many did this month. Many bills that are initially controversial seem to need an introductory session for constituents and legislators to have time to reflect on the consequences. This is the second time around for medical marijuana legalization for children. In the interim the rewritten bill has gained the support of the departments of public health and consumer protection and the state chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. It's time. Pediatricians deserve this added tool to stop the suffering when they can. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom