Tuesday, March 31, 2009

YOUTHS ARE MAKING A MOCKERY OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAWS


Jerrod Menz NEWS RELEASE
(800) 757-9867
Jerrod@abttc.com


YOUTHS ARE MAKING A MOCKERY OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA LAWS

One California drug rehab center is seeing increasing numbers of youths in their 20s who have obtained medical marijuana cards after telling their doctors they were suffering from back pain and other ailments

MURRIETA, Calif., March 31, 2009 – Thirteen states have legalized the medical use of marijuana with a doctor’s approval, a development that has led to the rapid growth of cannabis dispensaries from coast to coast.

But one prominent drug treatment center in Southern California is finding that the recipients of medical marijuana cards are not just elderly people with terminal illnesses, but young people in their 20s who are faking back pain and other ailments in an effort to legally obtain the drug.

“Young people are finding they can easily trick doctors into giving them medical marijuana cards by claiming they are suffering from back pain and other ailments whose existence is difficult to prove,” said Jerrod Menz, president of A Better Tomorrow Treatment Center Inc., a Murrieta, Calif.-based drug and alcohol rehabilitation center.

“We recently had one client in his 20s who told us he obtained a medical marijuana card by telling his doctor he was suffering from foot pain. He laughed and said his doctor gave him the prescription after a five-minute examination,” Menz said.

Menz said several young people have voluntarily surrendered or destroyed their medical marijuana cards after receiving treatment at his clinic. But he said doctors need to use more care in their examinations of young people who come into their offices with complaints of persistent pain to better prevent people from abusing the intent of medical marijuana laws.

Thirteen states have legalized the medical use of marijuana, including Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. Additional states are considering laws that would legalize marijuana for medical treatment.

Based in Murrieta, Calif., A Better Tomorrow is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF), placing it in the top 5 percent of drug and alcohol treatment centers in California. For more information about A Better Tomorrow, please contact Jerrod Menz at (800) 757-9867. Additional information is available on the clinic's website at http://www.abttc.com/

If you need help or know of someone who does, please contact A Better Tomorrow today. We are here to help.
http://www.abttc.net/
Phone: 800.971.1586
Fax: 800.401.8464
24 Hour Addiction HelpLine
Tel. (800) 396-9389 (7 days 24 hours)
e-mail: info@24houraddictionhelp.com
http://www.24houraddictionhelp.org/

3 comments:

  1. Surely those doctors are not giving them the marijuana card after 1 visit complaining of pain. I would think that there would have to be a medical history of documented pain over a period of at least months if not years, where other treatments have been tried. That's tantamount to drug pushing as far as I'm concerned and those doctors should be prosecuted.

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  2. This article sounds as if the doctors are the ones who need to be educated and reprimanded when necessary for giving the card to anyone without being 100% sure that it is a medical necessity. I thought only people who were suffering from an incurable didease could get marijuana for their pain. I was OK with that but certainly not for any little ache or pain.

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  3. For people going to a California drug rehab, one of the most important factors is getting out of denial long enough to realize that help is needed.

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