Las Vegas Review-Journal

Veterans key as states approve medical pot for PTSD

- By Jennifer Peltz The Associated Press

NEW YORK — It was a telling setting for a decision on whether post-traumatic stress disorder patients could use medical marijuana.

Against the backdrop of the nation’s largest Veterans Day parade, Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced this month he’d sign legislatio­n making New York the latest in a fast-rising tide of states to OK therapeuti­c pot as a PTSD treatment, though it’s illegal under federal law and doesn’t boast extensive, conclusive medical research.

Twenty-eight states plus the District of Columbia now include PTSD in their medical marijuana programs, a tally that has more than doubled in the last two years, according to data compiled by the pro-legalizati­on Marijuana Policy Project. A 29th state, Alaska, doesn’t incorporat­e PTSD in its medical marijuana program but allows everyone over 20 to buy pot legally.

The increase has come amid increasing­ly visible advocacy from veterans’ groups.

Retired Marine staff Sgt. Mark Dipasquale says the drug freed him from the 17 opioids, anti-anxiety pills and other medication­s that were prescribed to him for migraines, post-traumatic stress and other injuries from service that included a hard helicopter landing in Iraq in 2005.

“I just felt like a zombie, and I wanted to hurt somebody,” says Dipasquale, a co-founder of the Rochester, New York-based Veterans Cannabis Collective Foundation. It aims to educate vets about the drug he pointedly calls by the scientific name cannabis.

Dipasquale pushed to extend

New York’s nearly two-year-old medical marijuana program to include post-traumatic stress. He’d qualified because of other conditions but felt the drug ease his anxiety, sleeplessn­ess and other PTSD symptoms and spur him to focus on wellness.

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