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Should Medical Marijuana Be Used to Treat Kids With Autism?

Started by Pat McCotter, November 24, 2009, 03:44 PM NHFT

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Pat McCotter

Should Medical Marijuana Be Used to Treat Kids With Autism?
By Opposing Views Editorial Staff  , To Protect and Serve Opposing Views - November 17, 2009

With more and more children being diagnosed with autism, a search for a treatment is moving past traditional medicines. Now one focus is whether medical marijuana can be effective in curbing, easing or even reversing some of the by-products of autism.

In some instances, autism can make children violent and aggressive. "Sam" is one of those children. The 10-year-old boy from Northern California would lash out with no provocation.

"He got to the point where he was hurting other children, when he was in school, or in public places," his mother told KTLA News. "We'd be in line at the store, and he'd just bolt and hit another child in the face without any warning at all."

Working with doctors, Sam was put on traditional medications such as Risperdal, which has massive weight gain as a side effect. Sam was still violent, but now 20 pounds heavier and stronger.

After speaking with a medical cannabis doctor, the family decided to give marijuana a try. Sam's father grows it in the backyard, making the concentrated form commonly referred to as hash. Sam eats a speck of it hidden in a piece of fruit.

"The first time we did it, we wanted to see if it would work at all," the father recalled. "It was an amazing experience, I'll never forget it, as we watched what happened, it was like 'He's back!' It was like all this anguish, pent-up rage and aggressiveness went away -- it just calmed him down."

This is not the only success story. Marie Myung-Ok Lee of Rhode Island gives her autistic son cannabis tea and cookies made with marijuana-infused oil. Her 9-year-old son has aggression issues, stomach pain, and "pica," which means he eats non-edible items. But after taking his daily doses of medical marijuana, it all goes away. She writes on the website DoubleX.com:

"Next, we started seeing changes in J.'s school reports. His curriculum is based on a therapy called Applied Behavioral Analysis, which involves, as the name implies, meticulous analysis of data. At one parent meeting in August (J. is on an extended school year), his teacher excitedly presented his June-July "aggression" chart. An aggression is defined as any attempt or instance of hitting, kicking, biting, or pinching another person. For the past year, he'd consistently had 30 to 50 aggressions in a school day, with a one-time high of 300. The charts for June through July, by contrast, showed he was actually having days—sometimes one after another—with zero aggressions."

There are similar stories from many parents. But the big question remains: Is it really safe to give medical marijuana to children? Los Angeles-area pediatrician Chris Tolcher said we just don't know enough yet to give an answer.

"I think for all the parents out there whose children may have autism," Tolcher says, "The message here is that this is intriguing information that needs more research before we can confidently say that marijuana is a safe and effective treatment for autism complications."

But consider this from Dr. Bernard Rimland of the Autism Research Institute in San Diego:

"I stress that I am strongly opposed to drugs in general, and consider them a last resort to be employed only when safer and more efficacious treatments fail. But while I am not 'pro-drug,' I am very much 'pro-safe and effective treatment,' especially in cases where an autistic individual's behaviors are dangerous or destructive. Early evidence suggests that in such cases, medical marijuana may be a beneficial treatment, as well as being less harmful than the drugs that doctors routinely prescribe."

Sovereign Curtis

Quote from: Pat McCotter on November 24, 2009, 03:44 PM NHFT
Working with doctors, Sam was put on traditional medications such as Risperdal, which has massive weight gain as a side effect. Sam was still violent, but now 20 pounds heavier and stronger.

I lol'd

PattyLee loves dogs


I worked in Texas w kids for 3 years recalling one 5 y/o kid who would have sudden aggressive outburst towards other kids frequently within school setting. This was one of the toughest situations I have ever seen, parents apeared dedicated to the kid, no immediate explanation other than dx on the autism spectrum disorder. Gradual brief interaction of shared activity closely protective of other kid to attempt to return to group socialization appeared helpful but working within public school situation w arbitrary rule such as mandated full inclusion precluded progress. The pattern of responses by the school authorities was one of the many reasons I will never work with or recommend kids go to public school. This situation was not initially I believe, the blame at first of the school, but the difficulty imposed by administrators to address situation constructively along with general environmental mayhem, and misplaced interests of administration made situations much worse. So often kids are drugged way too quick but aggression may be a last resort case for early childhood pharmacological approach after approach of no public school. In this situation other much more normal kids were recommended for drug rx but not this kid.(?) Perhaps pot would be a more benign rx strategy; however risky as a controversial approach such as this would make the California family (described previously) to be vulnerable to invasion by CPS.

Tom Sawyer

 "A Cannabis Kid", by Christopher Largen
Quote
At 2004 Cannabis Therapeutics Conference, journalist Christopher Largen relates his personal use of medical marijauna as a child, contrasting it with the effects of Ritalin. George McMahon, one of the Federal IND legal medical marijuana patients and a director of Patients Out of Time, co-wrote Prescription Pot with Christopher Largen. Conference hosted by Patients Out of Time.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7641739836884152120#

Tunga

Could you please repeat the question please? Please. Thank you.

Patriot Henry

QuoteThere are similar stories from many parents. But the big question remains: Is it really safe to give medical marijuana to children?

Fact 1. Marijuana is the safest drug known to mankind.

Deduction 1. Marijuana is the safest drug to give to children.

The NYTimes had an article recently on this topic, as I expected they quoted the leading doctor from ONDCP who had concerns about "dependency". A Google search for the doctors name plus "ritalin" turned up a study from a few years ago by that doctor saying Ritalin makes math interesting.

So...be very wary of getting your kids hooked on the safest drug yet discovered...but if math bores 'em then get the good ol' family doctor to fill their veins with "poor man's coke".

On the same page, Montel Williams actually did a pretty decent show on medical marijuana which addresses children and medical marijuana, featuring a real heart breaking story of a kid whose parents and doctors gave him everything with either no effect or with detrimental effects and who was saved by medical marijuana, but then the DEA busted the caregivers garden so the parents couldn't get the medicine so the kid ended up in an institution.

Kat Kanning

Your deduction doesn't necessarily follow.  There are a lot of things that adults can handle better than children.