Dr. Joseph Parker is Texarkana's only physician yet to go public with the decision to authorize patients' medical marijuana use.
By KARL RICHTER,
TEXARKANA, Ark. (AP) — As Dr. Joseph Parker sees it, he
has little choice except to prescribe medical marijuana — even though
doing so may raise some eyebrows in Texarkana, Ark.
"I was reluctant initially to agree to prescribe it,
because you know anytime there's a change in policy, whichever doctors
agree to consider it first, people who disagree with that decision are
going to look at harassing or attacking them. You put yourself out for a
little scrutiny, and that wasn't what I was looking to do," Parker told
the Texarkana Gazette .
Parker said doctors have to look at the safest medication possible to relieve a patient's pain.
"I had patients who were suffering terribly on
medications that could be very harmful to them under the wrong
circumstances, or even if they use it just like it's prescribed,
sometimes things don't go well," he said.
Parker is Texarkana's only physician yet to go public with the decision to authorize patients' medical marijuana use. Arkansas voters elected last November to legalize the drug for treatment of certain medical conditions.
Despite the stereotype of a marijuana doctor as a thinly
veiled drug dealer, Parker will not be handing out prescriptions to
anyone who asks. His criteria are clear and stricter than state
regulations. To get a prescription from him, a medical cannabis patient
must be diagnosed with a qualifying condition by a different physician
and willing to reduce use of a more dangerous drug.
Anyone coming to him expecting a bogus diagnosis and rubber-stamp prescription will be very disappointed, he said.
"I'm not going to have someone come in with no prior
diagnosis, say they have anxiety and that they need this medication," he
said. "I want to make sure it is available to those it helps."
Patients suffering from a variety of ailments — from
appetite loss caused by chemotherapy to post-traumatic stress disorder
to chronic pain brought on by nerve damage and more — could benefit from
using marijuana, Parker said. And in doing so, they avoid the risks
involved with many other drugs, especially the addictive opiate
painkillers that have caused a nationwide epidemic of overdoses in
recent years.
"The medications we currently have to treat pain are not
good medicines. We don't have anything that is not addicting. We don't
have anything that continues to work well at all," he said.
By contrast, cannabis may be habit-forming for some people, but it is not addictive and has never killed anyone.
"We prescribe stuff all the time that we know has a high
addiction risk, if the patient has a condition that warrants treatment
with that to relieve their suffering. But a certain percentage of them
are going to go on to have a severe addiction to those substances.
"Whereas marijuana, you may want it, you may actually
crave it at some point, but you'll never die without it. If you get
hooked on methadone and you stop it abruptly, you can die," Parker said.
One 2014 study published in JAMA Internal Medicine showed
that, in the 13 states that passed laws allowing for the use of medical
marijuana between 1999 and 2010, 25 percent fewer people died from
opioid overdoses annually.
Cannabis can treat anxiety more safely than the class of
tranquilizers called benzodiazepenes, including the popular drug Xanax,
Parker said.
"If you start taking (Xanax) scheduled daily, it loses
its efficacy and actually starts having some rebound effects. You need
more and more and more frequently, and then your doctor says, 'Oh look,
you're using too much' and cuts you off, and then you have seizures or
other horrible panic attacks," he said.
In research trips to Colorado and Nevada,
both of which legalized medical marijuana in 2000, Parker learned that
cannabis is effective enough that many patients prefer it to other
medicines.
"When patients (in Colorado) are asked to give up one or
the other, either the opiates they're on or the marijuana, they choose
to give up the opiates. Patients who are paraplegic have been willing to
give up Valium if they can use medical marijuana. Well, Valium kills
thousands of people a year; marijuana does not. So medically it should
be a very quick choice," he said.
In addition to relieving chronic, severe pain, marijuana
can work "extraordinarily well" for spasms caused by nerve damage and
seizures, especially in children, Parker said. And one recent study
showed that a certain kind of cannabis "not just slows the progression
of Alzheimer's but appears to have some reversing effects."
Smoking anything is bad for the lungs, so Parker plans to
recommend edible preparations of marijuana, oils containing its active
ingredients and topical formulations that can be rubbed in through the
skin.
Beyond that, his advice will not necessarily be specific.
Patients can depend on medical marijuana dispensaries' years of
experience matching strains of cannabis to particular diagnoses, and
finding the right dosage can safely be a matter of trial and error, he
said.
Though patients are beginning to apply for medical
marijuana certification, it is unclear when a fully functional farming
and distribution system will be in place to satisfy the demand. The
Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission is reviewing hundreds of license
applications for the five cultivation centers and 32 dispensaries
allowed. Those businesses awarded licenses will then have to build their
facilities and grow a crop. Laboratory testing and transportation of
the product are also factors, with no rules yet in place for either.
Whenever the Arkansas cannabis industry is ready to
provide patients with the medicine he sees as obviously beneficial,
Parker will be ready to ensure his patients can get it — without any
stigma associated with recreational use.
"Most of these patients are not seeking a high. They just don't want to hurt. They just don't want to suffer," he said.
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