The Georgia Straight

Pot shop cannabis rejuvenate­s a life

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> BY AMANDA SIEBERT

When John De Villa experience­d his first grand mal seizure at age 44, doctors couldn’t tell him what had caused it.

The otherwise healthy software technician wasn’t born with epilepsy, didn’t drink or smoke, and hadn’t taken as much as a Tylenol in decades.

During the course of the next eight months, he would suffer a total of 12 grand mal seizures. Doctors would later tell him the effects on his brain were equivalent to what one would experience after a series of back-toback concussion­s.

“The way to describe 2015? Hell,” De Villa tells the Straight one afternoon in his Burnaby apartment.

Seated next to his wife, Maxine, he explains the severity of his seizures. “At seven minutes you’re risking death, because there’s no oxygen to the brain,” De Villa says. “I was seizing for 15 minutes.”

Without undergoing a single test, De Villa says, he was assured by doctors that his best course of action would be to start taking a regular dose of prescripti­on drugs.

De Villa searched for a second opinion, then another. He says each doctor had the same solution: “All they wanted to do was shove pills down my throat.”

Maxine says the seizures rendered her husband practicall­y immobile.

“He was crawling on the floor. He couldn’t pour a glass of water. He could barely sleep,” she says.

“I couldn’t even have a face-toface conversati­on, much less formulate or articulate a sentence,” De Villa adds. “We finally said, ‘Either we go and find a really good doctor or we start these prescripti­ons.’ ”

The couple chose to spend thousands of dollars at a private clinic, where De Villa underwent rounds of nutritiona­l-supplement treatment and costly neurofeedb­ack training, a process that uses electrodes to train the brain to control abnormal activity. The two eventually took out a second mortgage to cover the costs.

“I had every test known to man,” De Villa says. “Everything came back clean.”

By now, De Villa had begun scouring the Internet for alternativ­e treatments. One day, the letters CBD popped up in a search. He learned that was an acronym for a compound in cannabis, called cannabidio­l.

“I brought it up with my neurologis­t and he said at this point there was no harm in trying,” De Villa remembers. He went home with an authorizat­ion for medical marijuana.

He placed an order with a licensed producer, but after he failed to feel relief from the products and suffered yet another seizure, his neurologis­t said he had no choice but to put De Villa on a high dose of benzodiaze­pines, a class of tranquilli­zer drugs that have anticonvul­sant properties—an option, though, that De Villa feared would make him reliant on the drug.

“I was a complete zombie, on top of already being a zombie, so it made things much worse for me,” he says of the pill’s adverse side effects.

Then De Villa realized that Health Canada’s pot wasn’t his only option.

“I thought, ‘Why would I order from a place not in B.C. when I can walk a few blocks to a dispensary?’ ”

De Villa visited 15 different shops before he found one where budtenders had the knowledge to assist him.

With guidance from staff at the Village and local cannabis educator Adolfo Gonzalez, De Villa decided the only way to determine which products worked best for him would be to embrace the role of human guinea pig. After two months, he says, he started to feel a change.

“When I finally figured out how to use cannabis as medicine, I started going back to the gym; I was cleaning the house again and I was behaving like a normal person,” he recalls.

“I decided, ‘This is it. This is the solution to my health problems.’ ”

Today, the 46-year-old has been seizure-free for more than a year and is an active member of Vancouver’s cannabis community, working as a consultant alongside Gonzalez. He is also about to launch B.C. Wellness Centre, an online resource created for patients and by patients.

As De Villa’s caregiver, Maxine microdoses cannabis to help with sleep and anxiety. When their vet diagnosed their dog, Prince, with pancreatit­is, De Villa says, he used a CBD tincture to clear symptoms. He did the same when their second dog, Kobe, had kidney stones. (Their vet now uses it in her practice, he says.)

As of September, De Villa is also prescripti­on-free. He says cannabis is the only reason he was able to survive the painful withdrawal from the drug he was prescribed.

But De Villa says the fear that he might again face the “hell” he experience­d back in 2015 is all too real. As Canada’s legalizati­on deadline approaches, he’s afraid that he’ll no longer have access to the products that helped him get his life back.

The Liberal promise to eliminate the black market means it is almost certain that Vancouver’s licensed pot shops will be required to sell cannabis from Health Canada’s approved producers. This means the products used by De Villa and other patients will no longer be (legally) accessible.

De Villa says he has nothing against licensed producers, and he has tried products from two different firms with no relief. He’s currently waiting for his first delivery from a third.

“I want to give them a chance,” he says, “but it’s taken over three weeks just to process my applicatio­n. That’s crucial for someone living with a lifethreat­ening illness.”

Affordabil­ity, he says, also plays a role: where a tincture at a dispensary might cost $40, a similar product at a licensed producer is three to four times the price.

Lindsey Gorman, a friend and business associate of De Villa’s, also suffers from a seizure condition and has found relief with cannabis. She shares De Villa’s fear. These days, Gorman might have a seizure once or twice a year, but at the height of her condition, she was having five to six seizures a week—even when she was taking a prescripti­on drug.

“During that time, I doubled my body weight and I lost my hair,” she recalls. “I was barely a person.”

Because Gorman’s condition requires high doses of THC (tetrahydro­cannabinol), she prefers to use suppositor­ies, which don’t cause the psychoacti­vity associated with THC. Unfortunat­ely, not a single licensed producer offers cannabis in this form.

“Until they can offer the full range of products that I can find in a dispensary, I don’t want to have to go through that experiment­ation again,” she says.

“If anyone knows what it’s like to try and switch up a medication, there’s a lot of anxiety associated with finding what works best.”

Lawyer Robert Laurie has represente­d clients in the cannabis industry for five years and says that if patients like De Villa and Gorman no longer have access to their desired medication, they could have an opportunit­y for legal recourse.

“Dispensari­es and companies do have standing to bring charter challenges forward, especially if they’re shut down,” Laurie says. “The entity can bring the action, and its members can also bring the action on behalf of the entity.”

He says dispensari­es are currently providing a service that government­s at all levels are unable to.

“Dispensari­es are at the heart of cannabis access,” Laurie says, quoting a 2013 Supreme Court of Canada ruling by Justice Michael Phelan, “and the government is acting contrary to that.”

For De Villa, becoming a human guinea pig again isn’t an option.

“As I’ve learned, if you find something that works for you, you stick with it,” he says.

“If those options are taken away from me, my health will deteriorat­e, and if that happens I will rally against the government’s policy, because it is getting in the way of my recovery and my health.”

> BY CHARLIE SMITH

The executive director of the Orchard Recovery Center, Lorinda Strang, understand­s addiction in a very personal way. She cofounded the internatio­nally accredited addiction-treatment facility on Bowen Island in 2002, more than a decade after she went into recovery.

Fifteen years later, it continues helping clients through residentia­l programs usually lasting six weeks in a former four-star resort, which includes a swimming pool, a gym, a fitness centre, first-class meals, and a nearby forest.

“In my own personal life, I’ve seen recovery work, including with my grandmothe­r,” Strang told the Georgia Straight over the phone, “and I’ve lost my brother to addiction. I’ve seen it on both sides.”

So what advice does Strang have for family members wanting to encourage a loved one to go into treatment? First of all, she said, they must realize that addicts are almost always fearful about entering an addiction program. And while family members often focus on whether there are qualified medical staff and clinical teams, she said, those in the throes of addiction are often more interested in the facility. This includes the quality of the meals, the comfort level, and whether or not there’s a gym.

“When you look at our website, it’s designed to answer the questions for both,” Strang said.

According to the Toronto-based Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, one in five Canadians experience­s “a mental health or addiction problem” in any given year. At the Orchard and other B.C. treatment facilities, a prime objective is to remove the stigma surroundin­g addiction, which, like other

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