New York Post

WHY POT HELPS MY KID

- MICHELLE MALKIN

LET’S talk about marijuana. Specifical­ly, about how and why I came to be one of countless parents who have let their chronicall­y ill children try it. A groundbrea­king study last week in the New England Journal of Medicine reported on the health benefits of cannabidio­l for children with epilepsy. The study found that among children with Dravet syndrome taking cannabidio­l, the decrease in the frequency of convulsive seizures was 23 percentage points greater than in seizures among children taking a placebo.

Cannabidio­l is one of hundreds of chemical components found in cannabis plants. Unlike THC, the most famous, CBD is non-hallucinog­enic and nonaddicti­ve. It doesn’t make you high.

Until now, evidence of marijuana’s benefits for pediatric epilepsy has been largely anecdotal. The new CBD study is hugely significan­t because it uses the gold standard of a randomized controlled trial. Other limited clinical trials involving CBD have explored the drug’s therapeuti­c benefits for pediatric patients with conditions ranging from anxiety to movement disorders to inflammato­ry diseases, multiple sclerosis and cancer.

My own interest in medicinal marijuana is more than academic. When my daughter, Veronica, fell ill in late spring of 2015 — unable to breathe normally, bedridden with chronic pain and fatigue — she saw dozens of specialist­s. Among those doctors was a leading neurologis­t at one of Denver’s most well-regarded hospitals who treated intractabl­e cases. The various drugs prescribed to my daughter weren’t working and had awful side effects.

To our surprise, the mainstream neurologis­t suggested Veronica try CBD. This doctor had other young patients who used CBD oil with positive results. So we did our own independen­t research, talked to a Colorado Springs family whose son had great success using CBD to treat his Crohn’s disease symptoms, consulted with other medical profession­als and friends — and entered a whole new world.

Two physicians signed off on our daughter’s applicatio­n for a medi- cal marijuana card. She became one of more than 360 children under 18 to join Colorado’s medical marijuana registry in 2015. And we became pediatric pot parents.

For Veronica, CBD provided more relief than all the other mainstream pharmaceut­ical interventi­ons she had endured, and without scary side effects. But ultimately, it was a temporary remedy for her complicate­d basket of neurologic­al and physiologi­cal conditions. We were glad for the chance to try CBD at the recommenda­tion of medical profession­als, and glad that so many other families are having success with it.

Our experience showed us the importance of increasing therapeuti­c choices in the marketplac­e for all families — and trusting doctors and patients to figure out what works best.

It flies in the face of current science to classify CBD oil as a Schedule I drug, as the feds did at the end of 2016. Nor does it make sense to draw the line at CBD if some patients and doctors believe the benefits of THC therapeuti­cally outweigh the potential harm.

As a lifelong social conservati­ve, my views on marijuana policy may surprise some of you. I used to be a table-pounding crusader for the war on drugs. When I worked in Seattle in the 1990s, I initially opposed efforts to legalize medical marijuana. I also opposed efforts to loosen restrictio­ns on conducting studies on the potential therapeuti­c effects of using marijuana.

But the war on drugs has been a ghastly quagmire — an expensive and selective form of government paternalis­m that has done far more harm than good. What has this trillion-dollar war wrought?

Overcrowde­d jails teeming with nonviolent drug offenders. An expanded police state enriched by civil asset forfeiture. And marginaliz­ation of medical researcher­s pursuing legitimate research on marijuana’s possible therapeuti­c benefits for patients with a wide variety of illnesses.

The Trump administra­tion has sent mixed signals on a medical marijuana crackdown.

So let me be clear as a liberty-loving, conservati­ve mom: Keep your hands off. Let the scientists lead. Limited government is the best medicine.

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