Pubdate: Mon, 15 Jan 2018
Source: Boston Globe (MA)
Copyright: 2018 Globe Newspaper Company
Contact: http://services.bostonglobe.com/news/opeds/letter.aspx?id=6340
Website: http://bostonglobe.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52
Author: Margery Eagan

USING MARIJUANA TO FIGHT THE OPIOID CRISIS

IN WASHINGTON, Attorney General Jeff Sessions has reversed Obama
administration policies and freed US attorneys to prosecute the
marijuana business, even where it's legal.

In Boston, US Attorney Andrew Lelling has given no assurances that he
won't.

Meanwhile, in a nondescript Natick strip mall, in a physician's office
above a pizza joint and dance school, and down the hall from the
Ebenezer Assembly of God ministry, Dr. Uma Dhanabalan helps patients
use marijuana to wean themselves from an actual drug menace. That
would be opioids, legally prescribed, government approved, a drug
that's made billions for the politically wired pharmaceutical industry
and now kills nearly 100 Americans every day.

"I hated them," said Beth, one of Dhanabalan's patients, a 52-year-old
wife and mother, about the Hydromorphone and Oxycodone she was
prescribed for pain from a herniated disc and osteoarthritis.

On opioids, she couldn't work. Her job involves money. She couldn't
misplace a decimal point. The drugs made her "cotton-ball headed, like
a hangover mixed with a cold. I couldn't think."

The US attorney for Mass. should have clarified how Jeff Sessions'
comments regarding pot will affect drug prosecutions in the state.

She also endured the indignities of another notorious opioid side
effect: constipation. For that, physicians routinely prescribe yet
another drug with side effects almost as horrifying as those of
opioids. Opiod side effects include not just dizziness, drowsiness,
mood swings, and confusion, but also addiction, accidental overdose,
and death.

"The nerve pain used to be unrelenting, like pushing out at the front
of your consciousness," she said. But the marijuana "put a barrier
between conscious awareness and the pain. It's still there, but like a
shadow. It's not banging. And I am clear-headed.

"I used to drink two glasses of wine a day. Now I've stopped drinking
almost entirely. Now I do errands and walk the dog." She stood up and
showed me her loose pants. "And I've lost 30 pounds."

Beth did not want her last name used. She has a teenage son. Stigma
and unease remain. And both became worse when prosecutor Lelling
called marijuana a "dangerous" drug he may, or may not, crack down
on.

The irony, said Dr. Dhanabalan, is that "nobody in the world has ever
died from a cannabis overdose." She calls cannabis "the exit drug"
from opioid addiction, a controversial claim but one that is fast
gaining traction.

Sitting in blue scrubs, pictures of a marijuana plant on one wall and
her medical degrees and a plaque from the Veterans of Foreign Wars on
another, the former family physician said it's hard to fathom the
continued hostility toward, and ignorance about, cannabis. She said
it's helped not only patients kicking opioids but also those with
cancer, PTSD, or common maladies like insomnia. "It changes lives,"
she said.

Surely it changed Daniel Snyder's. A 64-year-old Stoneham mechanic
badly injured in a tractor rollover, he said opioids helped his pain
tremendously - at first.

"The reason people get addicted is this stuff makes them feel so good,
it's like you could have a good time watching paint dry," he says.
"Then you want more, and you end up in a deep dark hole."

Married 43 years and the father of grown children who've lost close
friends to overdoses, Snyder said he was "whacked out on pain meds "
himself when his primary care doctor recommended Dr. Dhanabalan. Now?
His pain, opioid cravings, blood pressure, and weight have
dramatically decreased.

He thinks the government should focus not on marijuana, but opioids.
"It's a terrible thing," he said. "The government knows. As much as I
like doctors, they created this, and the pharmaceutical companies,
because of greed."

He said he is grateful to Dhanabalan. "I had a good life before," he
said. "Now I'm back to a good life, a respectful life. A happy life."
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MAP posted-by: Matt