The Day

Older patients opting more for medical marijuana for relief of pain

Last-ditch urgency outweighs stigma factor

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer

Since the Thames Valley Alternativ­e Relief medical marijuana dispensary opened in Uncasville in 2014, the pharmacist­s who run it always have seen a diverse bunch coming to the door. The conditions initially approved to qualify people to access medical cannabis products then ranged from cancer to post-traumatic stress disorder, which can affect young and old, rich and poor.

“We’ve always had a good mix of people,” owner Laurie Zrenda said.

As of this week, 26,652 Connecticu­t residents are registered with the state’s medical marijuana program, which allows them access to one of nine licensed dispensari­es and possession of up to 2.5 ounces of cannabis at a time. The law that created the program protects any informatio­n about participat­ing patients — including their average age and which diagnoses on the list of approved conditions are most common — from public informatio­n requests.

But doctors, dispensary owners and state officials say medical marijuana is becoming less of a novelty

and more a last-ditch effort for older patients with cancer or painful debilitati­ng conditions who are fed up with the side effects of opioids and other prescripti­on medicines.

“They’re in pain and they don’t know what to do, and it leads them here,” Zrenda said.

Joann Church, 68, was prescribed opioid painkiller­s after non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma left her in such extreme pain that she rarely left the armchair in her Montville living room. At one point she was taking multiple narcotic drugs, which caused side effects that required multiple surgeries and left her bloated, still often unable to leave the house and on antidepres­sant medication­s.

“I needed to get out of going around this revolving door,” she said. “I was just not doing anything. I did not want to live my life that way.”

Her oncologist suggested medical marijuana; a physician at his practice, Eastern Connecticu­t Hematology and Oncology, was registered to certify her for a card. Church said she hesitated at first, worried that the cannabis would make her intoxicate­d and her friends and family might judge her for using what they saw as an illegal drug.

“I was very skeptical, especially at my age, to let anyone know that this is what I was doing,” she said.

Church learned online that she could buy cannabis in an oil form — she has a chronic inflammato­ry lung disease, so smoking was out of the question — and attended a workshop in Massachuse­tts, where she learned how to infuse the oil into honey that she puts in her tea every morning.

The oil was so effective that Church cut out five different prescripti­on drugs, including the narcotics, from her daily routine. The cannabis treated the pain as well as the opioid drugs but also helped her sleep and eased her anxiety. She even made it into a balm that she said healed a burn on her hand almost overnight.

The cannabis oil is expensive — she spends almost $100 for a few ounces of oil that she infuses into honey or candy that lasts for weeks, and insurance companies don’t cover it — but she said she spends less than she used to in co-payments on her prescripti­ons.

Church’s friends noticed she looked healthier soon after she replaced the opioid drugs with the cannabis-infused honey.

“They would ask me, ‘What are you doing?’” she said. Even then, she worried about telling them.

“The only thing that held me back was the (stigma),” she said. “I didn’t want people thinking ... ‘Oh gee, is she high?’ I wanted them to see me how I was.”

Now, she said, she considers herself an advocate. “I can function,” she said. “And no one knows unless I tell them.”

That kind of word-of-mouth spread of informatio­n is how many people come around to medical marijuana despite decades of anti-drug messaging and laws making marijuana an illegal substance.

“So many people will come in saying ‘my sister-in-law has a card,’” Zrenda said. As more people realize that using medical cannabis won’t make you high, “this whole program is growing,” she said.

Most of the people who still are hesitant when they arrive at her door are older.

“I don’t get a lot of ... people in their twenties who are nervous about it,” she laughs.

James Preston, who lives in Willimanti­c and has replaced a Vicodin prescripti­on for a back injury with a few puffs of vaporized cannabis oil each day, regularly speaks to fellow veterans in a support group. Some are resistant to trying medical marijuana because of the lingering memory of their fellow service members becoming addicted to illegal drugs during the Vietnam War.

“They still have that feeling (about) what happened over there with the drugs and the heroin,” he said. He has been able to persuade several of them to apply for a card.

“I just tell them how it’s worked for me,” he said.

Dr. John Paggioli, who practices at the Eastern Connecticu­t Pain Treatment Center in Norwich, said he only recommends his patients try medical marijuana when they already have been prescribed opioid painkiller­s that they found didn’t adequately address their pain.

“All ages have interest in it,” Paggioli said. Most are comfortabl­e asking for it, either because they have used marijuana recreation­ally, or because they are out of options once opioid painkiller­s stop working, he said.

Paggioli said of about 150 patients to whom he has prescribed opioids, only a handful have replaced those medication­s with medical cannabis. Most of those patients have psoriatic arthritis or “post-laminectom­y syndrome” that affects people who still are in pain after spine surgery. He also occasional­ly recommends it to people with fibromyalg­ia, though it hasn’t yet officially been added to the list of approved conditions in the program. State Consumer Protection Commission­er Michelle H. Seagull recommende­d adding fibromyalg­ia to the list last year but final approval by the state Office of the Attorney General and a General Assembly committee still is pending, so any of Paggioli’s patients also must be diagnosed with one of the other conditions on the list before he can refer them for a card.

Because the federal government classifies marijuana as a schedule 1 drug, rigorous research on medical marijuana, including its effects on seniors, is hard to come by.

Anecdotall­y, Paggioli said, medical marijuana works better for some patients than others. “I’ve seen a wide range of reactions to using it.”

For some of his patients, cannabis can’t adequately replace the pain-relieving properties of narcotics. But others entirely have replaced their Oxycodone or Percocet prescripti­ons with cannabis.

“Some people say it does nothing,” Paggioli said. “A lot of people say it helps them sleep. The best response I ever heard was one patient who said that it equated to the effect of his sleeping pill, his muscle relaxer and his antidepres­sant.”

Zrenda said more of her customers — including an increasing number of people over the age of 80 — are turning to medical marijuana after they find their prescripti­on medication­s, especially narcotics, lose effectiven­ess over time.

“I hear that sentence all the time — they’ve tried everything and they don’t know what else to do,” she said.

After they find the right medical cannabis product for them with the appropriat­e levels of THC, the chemical component that causes intoxicati­on, and CBD, which doesn’t, she starts hearing a different sentence: “‘I don’t know why I didn’t do this three years ago.’”

 ?? MARTHA SHANAHAN/THE DAY ?? Joann Church, who replaced several prescripti­on medication­s with medical marijuana, holds a jar of the cannabis-infused honey that she puts in her tea every morning, at her home in Montville.
MARTHA SHANAHAN/THE DAY Joann Church, who replaced several prescripti­on medication­s with medical marijuana, holds a jar of the cannabis-infused honey that she puts in her tea every morning, at her home in Montville.

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