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Medical marijuana care-giver role to be redefined

By Emily Johnson


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Medicinal Marijuana:

  • - Amendment 20, approved in 2000 and implemented in 2001, allows for the use of medical marijuana by patients suffering from certain debilitating conditions.
  • - Debilitating conditions include cancer; AIDS; glaucoma; severe pain; severe nausea; seizures, including those that are characteristic of epilepsy; persistent muscle spasms, including those that are characteristic of multiple sclerosis.
  • - To apply for the Medical Marijuana Registry program, patients must have documentation from their physician that shows they have a debilitating medical condition and might benefit from the medical use of marijuana.
  • - Patients cannot engage in the medical use of marijuana in plain view of the general public.
  • - A patient may appoint a primary care-giver who has "significant responsibility" for the patient's care. The care-giver also may control acquisition of the marijuana.
  • - A patient and care-giver, collectively, are lawfully allowed to possess no more than 2 ounces of a usable form of marijuana and no more than six marijuana plants, with three or fewer being mature, flowering plants that are producing a usable form of marijuana.
  • - Patients must reapply every year.

Though the issue of medical Marijuana continues to be a point of political and moral debate, there's a new emerging trend among care-givers that's helping to legitimize their role in patient care.

"It's not just about growing a bunch of weed because we can," Tina Valenti said.

Valenti is a medical marijuana care-giver in Fort Collins. By law, she's allowed to grow marijuana and distribute it to registered medical marijuana patients in Colorado.

While there are restrictions on the amount of marijuana that care-givers and patients can grow and posses according to Amendment 20, there are no clear guidelines that define a care-giver's role.

"Right now, anyone can be a care-giver," Valenti said.

Care-givers must be at least 18 years of age, but there is no requirement that they have medical training or background.

CSU students who feel they might qualify for medical marijuana privileges face more restrictions than the general public.

"It's not a free pass," Kathy Harward, Director of Student Legal Services, said. While there's no law against possessing a medical marijuana card, it is against school policy to "medicate" on campus. It is also illegal to grow marijuana on campus.

"It's still illegal under federal law so there are risks involved in for students relying on the card to protect them," Harward said.

Calvin Gordon, a Fort Collins resident is interested in becoming a care-giver after seeing first-hand the effects of medical marijuana.

"My mother was dying of breast cancer and had no appetite. No matter what I bought from the store, she wouldn't eat. She was wasting away," Gordon said.

Desperate for something to revive her, he illegally obtained some marijuana and administered it to her via vaporizer. The effects were immediate.

"She grabbed my arm asked me to make her something to eat." Within days Gordon's mother had regained a healthy appetite.

"I firmly believe that using marijuana medicinally added several more months to her life," Gordon said.

His passion is to help others in the same situation.

"People need help and comfort when chronic pain and debilitation sets in. Sometimes pharmaceuticals just don't work, or they become addictive," Gordon said.

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