Also available at Cannabis in Canada.ca
After
three years of jumping through hoops and securing a legal source with a
doctor's prescription, Fabian D. Henry’s plans for cannabis treatment
for veterans were finally realized. Despite the heavy stigma surrounding
cannabis, especially in the military, Fabian's organization, Marijuana
for Trauma (MFT), expanded to four centres in four provinces after only
14 months in operation. Although the Veteran Affairs Office has offered
little to no help, MFT has been grateful for the coverage currently
provided. If a veteran has a service-related injury, the VA Office will
credit any expenses that injury may cause. For Fabian and others, that
means not having to worry about paying for up to ten grams of cannabis
per day from an LP, as in order to receive their reimbursement, a
veteran must go through the MMPR.
This predicament puts MFT
in a unique position. Even though Fabian doesn't think the LPs are
providing “dignified access”, (citing the average price of $10-a-gram)
without them there is no other way to get the reimbursement. “You could
never get it through a dispensary,” Fabian said, “because they're
technically illegal. The only reimbursement is through an LP, so our
group is pretty much the most viable group in the country when it comes
to the MMPR. We're the only coverage in the entire country.”
Essentially,
if veterans currently getting their medical cannabis reimbursed were
able to get that same exemption from independent cannabis farmers, then
the LPs would likely suffer a blow from which they would never recover.
Far from being some “free market” system, the LPs are relying on
taxpayers to subsidize veterans who are buying their cannabis. Without
these reimbursements, what motivation would a veteran have to purchase
from an LP? Without these reimbursements, would the LPs have any sales
at all? And can we really call them “sales” when it's coming from the
taxpayer?
Nevertheless, PTSD remains a large problem for returning
soldiers from Afghanistan. Fabian mentioned that PTSD is rampant in
those who have been deployed to Afghanistan, Bosnia, and Croatia.
“Your
brain is trained a certain way for a year before deployment,” said
Fabian. “You go there desensitized, somewhat. You react to situations,
you don't actually have time to process anything because you have to get
up the next morning and go and do the same thing again. So there's no
time to sit back and process anything... When you get back from the
war... it all starts to coming back on how close you may have been
dying, or seeing somebody die or being part of an explosion, or, you
know, returning fire. There's all kind of incidents that happen daily
and are just normal in that environment.”
Fabian added that it's
when these men and women come back that they realize none of what they
did was normal. As a consequence, the military is indirectly promoting
alcoholism, gambling, drugs, and addiction because soldiers are trained
to not to deal with their everyday reality. When they come back, the
nightmares come back with them. They don't know how to deal with a
“normal” environment.
That's why Fabian sees cannabinoid therapy
as crucial for returning vets, especially those afflicted with PTSD like
himself. “It allows you to be present,” he told CinC. “It allows you to
settle down and relax your mind, and not freak out... It gives you that
time you need to process what's going on.”
Nevertheless, Fabian
isn't overly excited for the joint clinical study on PTSD and cannabis
between licensed producer Tilray and the University of British Columbia.
“It's all heresay until I see something happen,” he said, referring to
the study as more about stock prices than actually helping patients.
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