The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

They let their son smoke pot to stop his seizures; Georgia took him away

- Daniel Victor © 2018 The New York Times

The pharmaceut­icals weren’t working. The 15-year-old boy was having several seizures per day, and his parents were concerned his life was in danger.

So Suzeanna and Matthew Brill, of Macon, decided in February to let their son try smoking marijuana — and his seizures stopped for 71 days, they say.

The Brills’ decision led to the boy, David, being taken away from his parents, who face possible fines and jail time after being charged with reckless conduct

for giving him the drug.

David has now been in a group home for 30 days, and his seizures have returned. He is separated from the service dog that sniffed out his seizures, and he is able to communicat­e with his parents only during short visitation­s and phone calls.

They maintain they made the right decision for their son’s health, despite their current predicamen­t.

“Even with the ramificati­ons with the law, I don’t care,” said Matthew Brill, his stepfather. “For 71 days he was able to ride a bike, go play, lift weights. We were able to achieve

that with David medicated not from Big Pharma, but David medicated with marijuana.”

Suzeanna Brill said authoritie­s “want to argue the legality of marijuana instead of taking care of the kid.”

In April, a Food and Drug Administra­tion advisory panel recommende­d approval of an epilepsy medication that has an active ingredient, cannabidio­l, that’s found in cannabis. The drug treats two rare forms of epilepsy, and, if approved, it would be the first cannabis-derived prescripti­on medicine available in the United States. It does not contain the ingredient­s that make people high.

But the science is far from settled on whether marijuana, or components of it, can effectivel­y treat seizures, and the parents cautioned that what made sense for them may not for other families.

Dr. Igor Grant, director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research at the University of California San Diego, said there is some data to suggest cannabis can have anti-epileptic effects, “but not terribly systematic data.”

He said that the Brills’ experience, as a single anecdote, is not proof that cannabis works as a treatment, but added that it should not be dismissed.

“I don’t mean we should rush out and give marijuana to everyone who has epilepsy,” he said, “but I think that there are probably epilepsies that would benefit from an alternativ­e treatment if they’re not controlled by our usual treatments.”

Suzeanna Brill said that she had been upfront with David’s doctors about the marijuana use, and that they hadn’t protested. But then she told the boy’s therapist on April 19, and hours later police were at their door.

The police drug-tested all three of them: Matthew Brill and David tested positive for marijuana, Suzeanna Brill tested negative. The parents admitted to police that they had given their child marijuana, and the officers demanded they stop, Suzeanna Brill said.

“We complied, and within 14 hours of complying we were rushing our son to the hospital,” she said. “And it was one of the most horrific seizures I’ve ever seen.”

The Twiggs County sheriff ’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

David stayed in the hospital for a week before being taken to the group home, Suzeanna Brill said. The parents were arrested and spent six days in jail, causing Matthew Brill to lose remodeling work, he said.

Matthew Brill is now delivering pizzas, and Suzeanna Brill is taking on extra shifts in a variety of jobs to help raise money for a lawyer. They’ve turned to crowdfundi­ng, but had raised just $1,000 as of Wednesday, with several donations coming after WMAZ, a local TV station, reported on them this past weekend.

They hope the lawyer can help them get David back, a process they believe could take as long as a year.

Despite their legal challenges, they say they did what they needed to as parents.

“Had it not been for me and my husband, my son would probably have been long dead,” Suzeanna Brill said.

 ?? COURTESY OF SUZEANNA BRILL ?? Suzeanna and Matthew Brill allowed their 15-year-old son, David, to smoke marijuana to treat his seizures.
COURTESY OF SUZEANNA BRILL Suzeanna and Matthew Brill allowed their 15-year-old son, David, to smoke marijuana to treat his seizures.
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