Pubdate: Fri, 5 Dec 2008
Source: Detroit Free Press (MI)
Copyright: 2008 Detroit Free Press
Contact:  http://www.freep.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125
Author: Tammy Stables Battaglia, Free Press Staff Writer
Cited: Hemp and Cannabis Foundation Medical Clinics' new location in 
Southfield http://thc-foundation.com/michigan/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Marijuana - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?232 (Chronic Pain)

MICHIGANDERS GO TO CLINIC SEEKING POT TO DULL PAIN

Doctors There to Give OK

Getting high was the furthest thing from their minds as some of 
Michigan's first legal medical marijuana users lined a Southfield 
waiting room Thursday.

But they all shared one thing: pain.

"I pray it helps the pain like they say," said diabetic cancer 
patient Renee Collinsworth, 48, of Croswell. She is hoping to dull 
the pain from a 1986 motorcycle accident in Ferndale. "It's not all 
about smoking it, either."

Michigan became the 13th state to allow the use of medical marijuana 
to treat debilitating illnesses after voters approved it in November. 
A licensed physician must grant approval before patients can use the 
otherwise illegal drug.

The patients waiting in the Southfield office either wouldn't or 
couldn't get approval from their regular doctor. So they were at the 
opening of the Hemp and Cannabis Foundation Medical Clinics' new 
location in Southfield. THCF Medical Clinics, a nonprofit 
headquartered in Oregon, employs seven doctors in eight states solely 
to sign off on medical marijuana use.

"If a patient's personal care physician is unwilling to sign off on 
their registration application packet, we have one that will," Brian 
Schreckinger, a spokesman for the group, said Thursday. Schreckinger, 
28, said he became involved in the cause after excruciating pain from 
breaking his ankle skateboarding kept him up at night.

"Sometimes I'd be complaining I'd just want my foot chopped off," he said.

John Smith, 33, of Monroe was trying to find relief from back pain 
stemming from a 1998 car accident. And he doesn't want to use 
painkillers anymore.

"I've seen so many people dying on pills," he said. "And that's all 
the doctors push on you is the pills.

"Sometimes I think it's in my head, and they're just keeping me doped 
up on pills."

Charles Synder III, 31, of Flint suffers from Nail Patella Syndrome, 
a hereditary condition that causes kidney issues and painful bone defects.

"When I use cannabis, it doesn't take it 100% away," said Snyder, who 
collected signatures to help put a measure legalizing medical use of 
marijuana on the November ballot. "It doesn't put me in a zombie-like 
state like OxyContin."

Eric Eisenbud, a licensed ophthalmologist, examined each of the 
patients Thursday. He interviewed them, reviewed their medical 
records, checked their blood pressure and listened to their heart 
before handing out authorizations.

Eisenbud said he joined the practice looking for more fulfillment 
than he was finding in practicing ophthalmology. At the clinic, "I 
see those patients every day that make me feel that I'm doing a 
worthwhile endeavor," Eisenbud said. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake