Minn. medical marijuana program opens doors to chronic pain patients
Signing up: Elisa McCann, 3, is enrolled and ready to become one of the first pain patients admitted to Minnesota’s medical marijuana program. Elisa has epidermolysis bullosa, which causes her skin to blister and tear at the slightest contact. |
Enrollment spiked in July after the pain patients were admitted to state program.
On Monday, the state will expand its medical
cannabis program to include a new category of patients suffering from
severe, chronic pain that is not eased by traditional drugs or
therapies. Opening to intractable pain patients could bring relief to
thousands, while bringing new customers into a program that has
struggled with low enrollment and high prices.
In
a state where more people die from prescription painkiller overdoses
than from homicides, patients and their doctors are watching with
mingled hope and worry.
Judy Severson sees only
hope. Disabled by pain and exhausted by the debilitating side effects of
opioids that make it an effort to read a book or wash her hair, she has
an appointment booked Monday, as soon as the Bloomington clinic opens.
“I
want people to know that a 70-year-old grandma with intractable pain is
doing this,” said Severson, a mother of four and grandmother of eight
who lives in Edina.
She has an inoperable cyst
on her spine, fibromyalgia, and arachnoiditis — inflammation of the
lining of her spinal cord that sends burning pain shooting through her
body. The combined diagnoses have kept her housebound and hoping for
some way to restore her quality of life.
“We
take for granted the idea of meeting a friend for lunch, or ‘I have
these errands to run,’ or ‘Let’s go for a drive.’ For me, right now,
that’s not possible,” said Severson, who has tried almost every
prescription opioid available and currently takes hydrocodone five times
a day just to take the edge off her pain.
Severson
wanted her story known, she said, to take away the stigma that lingers
around medical cannabis — a drug the federal government still classifies
as a dangerous narcotic with no recognized medical use, even though
half the states have legalized its use.
“I’m not alone,” she said. “There are so many people suffering, and suffering much worse than I am.”
Hundreds enroll
Minnesota’s
year-old medical marijuana program is one of the smallest and most
restrictive in the nation. The state limits who can buy it, where they
can buy it, and in what form.
As of Friday, the
Office of Medical Cannabis had 1,827 active patients. State planners had
estimated that 5,000 might enroll in the program’s first years — well
short of the tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of participants
in other state programs. But that was before Minnesota expanded its
program to pain patients, who make up the bulk of medical marijuana
customers in many states.
Advocates hope an influx of pain patients will help bring prices down.
The
first began enrolling with Minnesota’s Office of Medical Cannabis on
July 1. By Friday, 481 had joined a program that usually averages 150 to
200 new certifications per month.
Despite the interest, doctors remain skeptical.
Prescription
opioid overdoses killed 336 people in Minnesota last year and many
doctors, having heard pitches about painkilling wonder drugs before, are
leery about encouraging patients to pin their hopes on marijuana — a
drug that is still banned at the federal level and has undergone
relatively little medical scrutiny in the United States as a result.
Dr.
Steven Bergeson, a family practitioner in Shoreview and director for
care improvement at Allina Health, says it’s risky to turn to medical
marijuana in the absence of research showing its potential harms.
“There
was a lot of expert opinion early on that you couldn’t hurt people with
opioids, either,” said Bergeson, who does not certify patients for
medical marijuana.
Some patients with qualifying
conditions have been unable to get into the medical cannabis program
because their doctor, clinics or entire health systems have opted out
and refuse to certify that they have cancer, epilepsy or one of the
other handful of serious medical conditions that allow Minnesotans to
legally buy medical marijuana.
Allina allows its
doctors to certify patients. But Bergeson said the health system’s
clinical practice council found the evidence in favor of medical
marijuana to be thin, particularly in the area of pain management, and
did not advocate that doctors pursue it as an option.
“There
really wasn’t convincing evidence that it was helpful,” he said. “The
kinds of pain that people will be coming in asking for help with are not
the kinds of pain that were studied. Chronic low back, for one, wasn’t
something that was studied.”
While many doctors remain unconvinced, some patients no longer wonder.
Two
decades ago, an accident left Pete LePage in a wheelchair, wracked by
muscle spasms and chronic pain that jabbed like a hot poker into the
extremities he could no longer move.
“It just
sort of pokes and pokes and pokes at you and you can’t do a thing about
it,” said LePage, 43, of Woodbury. “All the opioids in the world won’t
help.”
Muscle spasms are a qualifying condition
for medical marijuana in Minnesota, and when LePage enrolled in the
program last summer, he found that cannabis eased not only the spasms,
but the pain that came with them.
A year later,
he has stopped taking five prescriptions — for conditions ranging from
muscle spasms to pain to anxiety — in exchange for $600 a month worth of
cannabis oil from the LeafLine Labs clinic in Eagan. The clinic is
clean, safe and professional and a vast improvement, he said, from the
pre-legalization days when he tried to buy the drug off the street in
search of relief.
“I’m so happy,” he said. “It’s
amazing when you clear the fogginess [from the opioids]. … This is a
product that makes people better and happier.”
Winning over skeptics
Twenty-five
states have legalized medical marijuana, and pain is a qualifying
condition in most of them. In many of those states, overdose deaths seem
to decline, according to some studies.
A team
of University of Georgia researchers recently reported that doctors in
medical marijuana states seem to write fewer prescriptions overall. The
study, which looked at Medicare prescriptions in the 17 states that had
active medical marijuana programs between 2010 and 2013, found that
doctors wrote hundreds fewer prescriptions for painkillers,
antidepressants, anti-anxiety drugs and sleeping pills.
Those studies are winning over some skeptical physicians in Minnesota.
“Last
year, it was easy for all of my doctors to say ‘no, no,’ ” said
HealthPartners’ Dr. Arthur Wineman, who estimates that 15 percent of
HealthPartners’ family practice doctors and internists will be
certifying by year’s end. Three doctors recently called him with
interest, saying they had patients who would be ideal for medical
marijuana.
“This year, there’s a lot more interest, but there’s also still a lot of reluctance,” he said
Some
doctors, still feeling burned by drug company sales pitches two decades
ago that convinced them that opioid pain relievers were safe, don’t
want a repeat mistake. Others don’t want to be the first to certify —
and draw all of the patients seeking medical marijuana for pain relief.
The
state’s use of “intractable” pain is a political term, not a medical
diagnosis. Wineman said many patients mistakenly equate all forms of
chronic pain with “intractable pain,” which by the state’s definition
means a pain that hasn’t been addressed by any other therapies.
Doctors
can use that strict definition to encourage patients to try remedies
such as physical therapy before turning to marijuana.
“This is another way to get patients who are reluctant to try other things that might be more helpful for them,” Wineman said.
Hope for Elisa
A
panel of physicians and addiction specialists last year recommended
against opening Minnesota’s medical marijuana program to pain patients.
But Health Commissioner Ed Ehlinger, a physician himself, opted to
expand the program anyway, motivated in part by wrenching personal
stories from the people who crowded into public hearings to testify
about what it was like to live with pain.
Gabriella
McCann attended those hearings, carrying pictures of a toddler born
with a condition that left her small body covered with open sores,
inside and out. As soon as enrollment opened, McCann logged onto the
Minnesota Health Department website to sign up her 3-year-old daughter
for cannabis oil.
Elisa McCann was born with a
rare genetic condition, epidermolysis bullosa, that causes her fragile
skin to blister and tear. She’s undergoing experimental treatments at
the University of Minnesota Children’s Hospital, but there was no
painkiller her doctors could prescribe to make it easier for her to
play, or dance, or ride her tricycle while covered with wounds that feel
like third-degree burns.
In the family’s living room in St. Paul recently, Elisa gave her mother a hug, then stretched out one tiny leg for inspection.
“It’s hurting right here,” she said, patting a spot just above her knee. Her mother rubbed the spot gently.
Cannabis
oil, swallowed in drops or rubbed on the skin to speed healing,
reportedly helps children with Elisa’s condition. The family has few
other options.
“If you put a child on morphine when they’re 3, what are you going to do by the time they’re 6?” Gabriella McCann said.
Elisa,
who has weathered 32 surgeries and taken every painkiller from morphine
to oxycodone, smiled through the scrapes on her face from where she’d
tripped while playing the day before. She cued up a music video on an
iPad so she and her mother could dance.
Gabriella
McCann plans to talk with Elisa’s doctor about dosages. On Monday,
Elisa’s application status will switch to “approved” and her mother will
make an appointment to pick up the cannabis oil.
Minn. medical marijuana program opens doors to chronic pain patients
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