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The condition is far more severe than normal morning sickness, causing dehydration, weight loss, headaches, fainting, and extreme fatigue, and is often a threat to the life of the fetus and even the mother if left untreated.
"We threw everything but the
kitchen sink at it," Sandra said, "and I was still met with, 'well,
abortion is an option'—until I found cannabis."
Sandra lived in Texas, where medical
marijuana was not legal, and so she hid her usage from her obstetrician,
getting it from illegal sources, constantly worrying that she would be
reported.
As more and more states loosen
marijuana restrictions (24 have now legalized medical use), an increasing
number of women are opening up about pot for morning sickness. Facebook groups
like
NORML Women's Alliance and Moms for
Marijuana International
are two of the sites leading the discussion;
the latter has gained 544 new followers just in the past week, and a quick
Google search turns up scores of pregnant tokers asking for legal advice.
But
getting high while pregnant is still far from a medically acceptable treatment
option. The American Congress of Obstetricians & Gynecologists (ACOG) has
put pressure on its members as well as governing bodies to
classify marijuana alongside alcohol and tobacco as
dangerous substances for use during pregnancy, citing
insufficient data regarding its effects.
Meanwhile, a review published this month in the
medical journal
BMJ Open linked marijuana use in pregnancy
with low-birthweight babies and placement in the neonatal intensive care unit
after birth.
While the researchers indicate that pregnant women should abstain
from marijuana usage, they also acknowledge that most study subjects also
smoked cigarettes and consumed alcohol, which makes isolating the effects of
marijuana impossible.
But unlike cigarettes and alcohol,
there is clear medicinal value in marijuana. And mainstream treatments for
extreme morning sickness, like Zofran, are poorly studied and could be linked to side
effects for the fetus, including heart defects.
Originally intended for
chemotherapy patients seeking relief from extreme nausea, Zofran has become
a
popular treatment for morning sickness in
spite of not having FDA approval for this purpose. Given this reality, some
pregnant women feel marijuana is their best option.
Kelly in Kansas, who is currently seven
months pregnant, has been warned by her doctor that Child Protective Services
(CPS) might take her baby at birth because Medicaid requires she be tested for
drugs. (At present, there is no legal cannabis usage in Kansas.)
Kelly has been
upfront about her usage, and has continued to test positive for marijuana and
negative for all other illegal drugs, but she worries that her honesty might
cost her custody of her baby. Kansas law requires CPS be notified of positive
drug tests, and
repeat positives can result in the removal of children.
Like Sandra, though, Kelly felt she had little other option: Before she tried
marijuana, she was unable to eat or drink.
"I was extremely reluctant to try
it," Kelly told VICE, "but one day I was headed to the ER and a
friend said, 'Take one hit of this. If it doesn't help, I'll pay you $100 and
never ask you to try again.' I said fuck it, and tried. I avoided the ER for a
week thanks to that one bowl. I will consume any form of THC offered. I've
vaped, dabbed, eaten, smoked. And afterward, I notice my baby moves. My baby is
happy. She gets food and water after I smoke."
Of the six obstetricians approached for this story, none felt comfortable being named, and most
were unwilling to comment on using marijuana to treat morning sickness. One in
particular who specializes in hyperemesis gravidarum said that she would need
to "visit the studies for more information" as she had never before
considered using marijuana for treatment, despite practicing in a state where
it's legal.
In response to queries about treating HG with marijuana, an ACOG spokesperson sent a statement
by email from Joseph R. Wax, MD, Vice Chair of ACOG's Committee on Obstetric
Practice: "Our number one priority as ob-gyns is a safe outcome for mother
and baby. Although we still need more research on the topic, the data we do
have raises concerns regarding negative effects of marijuana on the growing
fetus, and, because of this, we recommend that women not use marijuana during
pregnancy."
Twelve of the 15 women interviewed for this piece who used marijuana to treat their HG
felt it had played an important role in their health. Some credited
it with saving their lives and that of their babies. But there are women for
whom smoking marijuana did not help. Stella from Tennessee had great success with it in
her first pregnancy, but lamented that "it didn't work for my second baby.
The
smell of it, even if it wasn't being smoked, made me sick. I lost him," she
said, adding that HG was likely a factor in her miscarriage.
Laura from Cambridge, England, used pot
pre-pregnancy as a means of controlling her IBS symptoms. When she
developed HG in pregnancy, she tried smoking marijuana and became
violently ill almost immediately. "Honestly, it magnified the nausea so
much
for me," she told VICE. "One go was enough to tell me my body did not
want weed in it with
a baby on board."
But the majority of women VICE spoke to with extreme
morning sickness found relief in pot. After being diagnosed with hyperemesis
gravidarum, Addy, a stay-at-home parent from Massachusetts, found herself
reluctantly trying marijuana as a treatment. "I dabbled with pot in my
teens, but I didn't like the way it made me feel, so I hadn't used it in quite
some time before becoming pregnant," she told VICE.
Unable to keep any food or water down,
Addy gave marijuana a try. She smoked it and felt instant relief. "My
husband would encourage me to use more often because he'd get to see a glimpse
of the person I was before pregnancy," she said. "Hyperemesis gravidarum
had turned me into a shell of the person I used to be. With marijuana, I could
converse. I was able to laugh and smile. Without marijuana, I couldn't do much
more than sleep and vomit."
Medicinal marijuana is legal in
Massachusetts, but that doesn't mean a pregnant woman can find a pot-friendly
OB/GYN there. While states with looser restrictions don't explicitly forbid
marijuana usage for pregnancy, doctors are hesitant to go against ACOG, which
provides board certification. As a result, obtaining a medical marijuana card
from an actual obstetrician is
rare.
Not long after giving birth to to a
healthy baby boy, Sandra from Texas moved to California and was pregnant for a
second time. "I started off with the notion that I would again use
cannabis, but from the get go [this time], and I would not get so desperately
sick," she said.
This time, Sandra was in no danger of police involvement,
since medical marijuana was legal in her new home state. In an unusual move, her
OB/GYN even supported her in obtaining a cannabis card. She carried her
pregnancy to full term at 40 weeks, never once requiring a visit to the
emergency room for IV fluids and medication, as she had multiple times in her
first pregnancy.
Until the larger medical community is more accepting of the idea that marijuana might sometimes help a pregnant women's health, it seems, doctors are hesitant to admit their involvement, despite some being willing to treat individual cases. As one commented, "I don't need the angry hate mail surrounding this issue."
*The subjects in this story asked to be
identified by pseudonyms to protect their privacy.
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