Advocates: Protect Medical Marijuana Access For PTSD Patients

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Soldiers For The Cause

Continued access to medicine threatened by a request to withdraw PTSD as a qualifying condition for the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program 
Military veterans and other patients to petition the Governor and the Secretary of Health: Don’t Take Away Our Medicine
More than 3,000 New Mexican residents with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) are actively enrolled in the state’s Medical Cannabis Program. Many of them are military veterans, patients living with disabilities, and victims of serious trauma and violent crime. Unfortunately, their continued access to medicine is being threatened by a request to withdraw PTSD as a qualifying condition for the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program.

William Ulwelling, M.D., on July 29 submitted a petition to the Department of Health requesting PTSD be removed from the list of eligible medical conditions for enrollment in the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program. His petition will be heard by the program’s Medical Advisory Board at a public hearing, November 7, 1-5 pm at the Harold Runnels Building, 1190 St. Francis Drive in Santa Fe.

The Puffington Host
The Campaign is asking all compassionate New Mexicans to join them to protect the rights of patients with PTSD

The Secretary of Health will have the final decision.
“We deserve access to effective medical treatments whether we’ve just come home from combat or we are suffering debilitating symptoms from other trauma,” said Chris Hsu, N.M. Medical Cannabis Patient’s Alliance’s vice president.
In defense of keeping PTSD as an eligible condition, the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Patient’s Alliance, the Drug Policy Alliance, and others are banding together for a campaign they are calling “Don’t Take Away Our Medicine – A Campaign” to make sure the voices of PTSD patients are heard loud and clear.
“When I returned home from Afghanistan I was diagnosed with PTSD,” said Michael Innis, who served in the general infantry and who was awarded a Purple Heart after the convoy in which he was traveling got hit by an IED and was then ambushed. “I worked with my doctor and tried many prescription drugs. Taking handfuls of pills every day, every one with a different set of side effects was hard on my body, and I still experienced some symptoms.”
“Cannabis was not my first choice of medicine, but I tell you first hand, this medicine works for me,” Innis said. “Cannabis allows me to leave my house and has helped me to return to work.”
The Campaign is standing up to protect the legal rights of patients to access safe medicine. They are asking for all compassionate New Mexicans to join them in telling the New Mexico Secretary of Health and the Governor to protect the rights of seriously ill New Mexicans and to reject the request to rescind PTSD as a qualifying condition by signing on to the Campaign.

Jane Phillips/The New Mexican
Nat Dean, shown with her assistance dog, Tommy, at their home in Santa Fe, developed chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder from injuries she sustained in a car crash in 1984. At one point, she was taking 27 different medications to ease her symptoms. She says the cannabis she uses through the state’s Medical Cannabis Program is an alternative tool that helps her more than all of her previous medications combined

“Tell them not to turn their backs on veterans, patients with disabilities, and victims of trauma and violent crime,” said Nat Dean, another medical cannabis patient diagnosed with chronic pain and PTSD. “We deserve access to the medicine that works for us. Don’t take away our medicine.”
“New Mexico’s decision to allow post-traumatic stress disorder as a condition that can be treated with medical marijuana is helping sufferers across the state cope with their symptoms,” editorialized The Santa Fe New Mexican on Saturday.
“We believe, given the accounts of people who are using medical marijuana, that the state should err on the side of compassion,” The New Mexican wrote. “Doctors and patients, after all, are best able to judge what treatment works for their ailments.”
The right to use medical cannabis was approved in 2009, when PTSD was added to the list of conditions eligible under the Lynn and Erin Compassionate Use Act. Since then PTSD has become the disabling condition most frequently indicated by patients in the program, and today accounts for 40 percent of the diagnoses of the citizens in our state’s medial cannabis program.
“The current pharmaceutical cocktails given to sufferers of PTSD have limited efficacy, have significant debilitating side-effects, and have in many cases proven deadly,” said Lisa Walker, M.D. a board-certified psychiatrist. “Given these facts, along with the experience of thousands of patients whose quality of life has been improved by its use, medical cannabis should continue to be an available treatment for the suffers of PTSD.”
“We will not allow the removal of PTSD as a qualifying condition for the medical cannabis program to happen quietly,” said Emily Kaltenbach, the New Mexico state director for the Drug Policy Alliance. “Patients deserve, above all, the freedom to choose the safest and most effective treatment for their disabling conditions — whatever that treatment might be.”
On November 8th, DPA is also relaunching an updated version of the report Healing a Broken System with current numbers and new material related to medical cannabis as a safe and effective treatment for veterans diagnosed with/suffering from symptoms of PTSD. The report examines the significant barriers that veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan face in obtaining effective treatment for mental health and substance abuse problems, and the tragic consequences of leaving these wounds of war untreated.
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