A bill is now sitting on the desk of Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper which, if signed, would legalize the use of medical marijuana by those with autism.
It has been passed by both the House and Senate with strong support, but the head of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment does not back it.

Jamie Kropp (L), Kolt Kropp (C) and Dan Brandt (R) (credit: CBS)
Kolt may look like your ordinary 10-year-old boy, but his family feels there has been a transformation.

(credit: CBS)

(credit: Kropp family)
“I’m sitting at my wit’s end crying not knowing what I can do for my son, but I knew he could have a better quality of life,” she said.

(credit: CBS)
“I knew if I came to Colorado I would be protected, that I could get Kolt his medical card and start treating him with cannabis,” she said.

(credit: CBS)
From their own plants, Jamie showed how she bakes, grates and mixes the cannabis with coconut oil to create what she considers a “miracle drug for her son.”

(credit: CBS)

(credit: CBS)

(credit: CBS)
“With a typical mind, smoking cannabis I feel euphoric effect. Does an autistic mind feel that?” he asked. Brandt added that we don’t know enough about the mind with autism to say for sure, but they experimented with different levels of THC and found what they felt was the best for Kolt.
Brain scans of other children with autism who have taken CBD (which does not include THC) and medical marijuana have sometimes shown a marked calming difference.
But the executive director at CDPHE, Dr. Larry Wolk, warns medical marijuana can be harmful to children with autism and there is no scientific evidence it is effective.

(credit: CBS)
“There was a little boy lost inside of his body. Since coming to Colorado, we have gotten our family back.”‘
Kropp and Brandt are so encouraged by what they have seen in Kolt they have a website on the subject.
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