The regimen not only ended the constant vomiting, but the San Jose,
Calif. mother can now finally eat an entire cheeseburger — and keep it
down.
“The medical field frowns on pregnant women using marijuana,” said
the 27-year-old bookkeeper, who lost 30 pounds early on in her pregnancy
because of her condition, called hyperemesis gravidarum, which also
causes dehydration.
“But I possibly would not have kept the pregnancy without it,” said
Richelle, who is now in her 25th week and asked that her last name not
be used because she does not want to be publicly attacked for her
beliefs.
After two decades of allowing its medicinal use, California is now
one of eight states that have legalized recreational marijuana for
people 21 and older. Public health officials, however, say the
implications surrounding its consumption by some people — like pregnant
women and adolescents, who may be more vulnerable to its potential
harmful effects — still must be addressed.
Some states — including Alaska, Washington and Colorado — require
warning labels saying the product should not be used by pregnant or
breastfeeding women. But California does not.
Surveys show that most Americans don’t like the idea of pregnant women using marijuana.
A Yahoo News/Marist College poll of 1,222 adults released this month
found that 67 percent of Americans think it’s safer to use marijuana
than opioids to relieve pain. But 69 percent said it’s not acceptable
for pregnant women to use marijuana to reduce nausea or pain. Half of
cannabis users — and 60 percent of those who have tried it — also don’t
think pregnant women should use marijuana, according to the poll.
Dr. Ira Chasnoff, a professor of clinical pediatrics at the
University of Illinois College of Medicine and a leading researcher in
the development of children prenatally exposed to alcohol and drugs,
said a range of studies supports those concerns.
“The general belief is that it’s not harmful,” Chasnoff said of
cannabis consumption. “But there are all sorts of aspects of cognitive
function — the way the brain works — that are impacted by marijuana
exposure.”
He pointed to research that shows low birth rates in babies born to
women who have consumed pot during pregnancy, as well as data on higher
rates of Attention Deficit Disorder and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder as they get older. Other research has shown that those
offspring later in life have problems with “executive functioning,” or
the ability to plan and complete tasks, Chasnoff said.
That’s why he believes guidelines that communicate the risk and
discourage the use of medical marijuana by pregnant women — or women
considering pregnancy — must be established.
Research indicates that
more U.S. women are now using marijuana during pregnancy, most often to
treat morning sickness — which most physicians say can be better treated
with more established medications.
A recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association
said that in 2014 nearly 4 percent of pregnant women between the ages of
18 and 44 reported having used marijuana in the past month, compared
with 2.4 percent in 2002.
In Oakland, 36-year-old Sarah — who runs a cannabis consulting
business with her husband — said she has been using the drug during her
17-week pregnancy to help not only with morning sickness but also with
sciatica pain and mood swings.
Like Richelle, she takes a few puffs of a marijuana cigarette every
so often, but also uses a few drops of liquid cannabis on her tongue at
night. The pain disappears, she said, and she’s able to keep food in her
stomach.
She has read a host of studies on the potential side effects the drug
might have on her baby. So have some of her relatives, who have told
her that using marijuana will “risk having my child come out dumb,” said
Sarah, who also said she didn’t want her last name published because
she fears she’ll be ostracized.
But she remains unconvinced by what she calls “limited research.” And
she says that she doubts that an organically grown plant could harm her
baby.
A landmark 395-page study on the health effects of cannabis and
cannabinoids released in January by the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering and Medicine also wasn’t able to draw many conclusions.
After reviewing the available research, the authors determined that
the long-term effects of smoking cannabis during pregnancy are still
unclear. But they did agree that there is substantial evidence that the
babies of women who smoke marijuana while pregnant have lower birth
weights.
Sarah says she doesn’t abuse the drug but believes it helps to reduce
the anxiety that comes with being pregnant. “There is a human inside me
growing, and everyone is telling me what I can and cannot do,” she
said. “It creates a lot of worry.”
And in her line of work, she has also met many women who used
marijuana when they were pregnant and whose children — of all ages —
seem well-adjusted.
“Everything in moderation,” Sarah said.
Chasnoff strongly disagrees with that view — and with patients who
tell him that cannabis is natural and organic. That doesn’t mean it
can’t potentially harm a fetus, he said.
“We know that marijuana’s THC (the psychoactive ingredient in
marijuana) crosses very readily from the blood into the brain, so even a
small amount has the potential for crossing over into the fetal brain,”
Chasnoff said.
The chemical is drawn to fat, he said, and because the fetal brain is
almost all fat, the drug remains there longer. It’s one reason why
marijuana, unlike other drugs, can be detected in a person for three
days to three weeks afterward, depending on the amount and concentration
of cannabis consumed.
Marijuana also crosses readily into a mother’s breast milk, said
Chasnoff, adding: “We have been able to measure the level of marijuana
in the baby’s urine.”
Dr. Frank Lucido, a primary care physician in Berkeley who for two
decades has recommended medical marijuana to his adult patients if he
determines it will benefit them, doesn’t believe there is enough
significant research to warrant pregnant women avoiding cannabis.
“With anything in medicine, you weigh the benefits and the risks,”
said the 69-year-old physician. “Nobody has ever died from cannabis, but
we know women die from hyperemesis gravidarum.”
So if a pregnant patient is unable to keep food or liquids in her
stomach, and marijuana would help, then he would advise it — as he does
to perhaps one or two patients each year.
“But I usually discourage it (smoking marijuana) because we don’t
know — and smoking can cause low birth weight,” Lucido said. “And maybe
smoking (the drug) is the problem.”
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