You decided to walk to work today. You’re being healthy, respecting the environment, and you’re surrounded by that beautiful weather we receive just as winter rolls off into spring. What could be better? You look to your left at the flowers blooming along the sidewalk, to your right, a playground bustling with children. All is serene. Yet suddenly, you hear a chilling scream and a cry for help, followed by the heart-wrenching sobs you can only identify as that of a hurt child. Without thinking, you rush to the source of the clamor to see a little girl clinging to a misshapen arm, easily deducting that she has fallen off those tricky monkey bars. You comfort her, calm her nerves, locate her mother and do all that you can to assist …show more content…
Should medical marijuana be legalized? Though Charlottes Web, the strain of marijuana concocted to treat these sick children, could save lives, others will argue against it. Look past the controversy and you will see that they are children, they are hurting, and they can benefit from this treatment; therefore legalization should be made throughout the entire country. Everything started with a little girl named Charlotte Figi. At seven pounds two ounces, she was born a healthy twin. Yet shockingly, on the eve of her third month, her body went completely rigid as her eyes flickered to the back of her head. That first seizure lasted thirty minutes, and the ones that would follow were no better. As the intensity grew with each seizure, so did the bafflement of renowned doctors. They held no answers for the Figi family, and so Charlotte’s parents decided to leave their home and travel to Colorado where the first medical marijuana treatments were being held. After a six-month struggle to obtain the needed requirements, Charlotte was dosed with a single drop of medical marijuana oil. The results were breathtaking. That very same day, her 300 seizures had dropped to 0. The week continued with this treatment, and the results remained the same. Now down to only 3 seizures a months, her parents were no longer watching her twin thrive as she declined. Charlotte, now able to begin talking, walking and feeding herself at age five, was on her way to being a happy
crushed her skull and left a huge scar. Ever since then she's suffered from seizures and instantly
How would most Americans react if the law allowed the use of heroin, LSD, or amphetamines for medical purposes? Many of us would react in disbelief mainly because of the effects of these powerful and addictive drugs. However, in Arizona the law permits the use of heroin, LSD, and amphetamines for medicinal purposes, yet the medicinal use of marijuana remains illegal in the United States ("Facts"). Because marijuana is categorized as a Schedule 1 drug under the federal Controlled Substance Act ("Issues"), physicians cannot legally prescribe it. The national debate on the effectiveness of marijuana as medicine is divided between those who advocate marijuana's medicinal value and
It took three hospital visits for the doctors to finally diagnose the correct problem, epilepsy. Through misunderstandings, Lia was not given the appropriate medication dosages and combinations to help with her epilepsy. At the age of three, Lia’s doctors, Neil and Peggy Ernst, sent her to foster care in hopes of better medical care by the parents; however, the seizures never stopped. By four years of age, Lia had been admitted into the hospital a total of 17 times and had over 100 outpatient visits. Lia’s worst seizure lasted about two hours and put her into a coma.
Shortly after they moved to Georgia, the Johnstons hit the lowest point they have ever encountered. In 2008, the economy collapsed and Susannah got laid-off because the company went bankrupt. Marc made the decision to go back to his homeland, Seattle. Just weeks after they arrived Seattle, they heard the news that their vacant house in Georgia flooded right before it went on to market for sale. Tragedy did not stop, Marc’s son Rodney had a seizure, which his brain stopped working for several minutes, and suffered from a seizure disorder named benign epilepsy for many years. “There were many negative things happened in 2008 for me. So many negative changes in life and it happened all at once. I went to a place of despair because it just seemed like it has no way out,” Marc explained to me. Thankfully, Marc won the lawsuit against the insurance company and got their house in Georgia covered, he found a job in Seattle and successfully avoided filing bankruptcy, and Rodney was eventually healed from the benign epilepsy. Marc’s life went through the tough time and it got
Seizure disorders, according to the Mayo Clinic (2015), affect approximately 1 in 26 people in the United States. Persistent, or chronic, seizures result from a condition called epilepsy, a neurological disorder of the central nervous system. It can affect anyone regardless of age, but is more common during early childhood and after age 60. Given the number of people that seizure disorders, such as epilepsy, affect, it becomes helpful to gain a foundational understanding of the disease, including some of the causes, symptoms, and treatments available.
Pediatric Case 1: Jackson Weber Guided Reflection Questions Opening Questions How did the simulated experience of Jackson Weber’s case make you feel? The simulated experience of Jackson Weber’s case wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be due to the fact that we have already learned about seizures with the pediatric population in class. The scenario did catch me off guared because I wasn’t expecting him to seize, since he had done so prior.
It is 7:11 on Friday night, the first of March 1996, in room 112 of Mercy Hospital in Portland, Maine. Married couple, Chris and Veronica Meserve of Steep Falls, Maine are welcoming their second daughter into the world, Shawna Irene Meserve. She will grow to be a physically and developmentally healthy being because of, among many factors such as her genetics, the circumstances and significant relationships surrounding her birth. Starting at the beginning of Shawna’s parents’ relationship, these circumstances and significant relationships surrounding this infant’s birth will be highlighted and analyzed to determine how they may have affected her very early development.
The documentary’s description of neuroplasticity of seizure patients represents the unknowing and negligent work ethic of modern day scientists and researchers alike. This is confirmed by the lack of treatment of these afflicted individuals who suffer a never ending siege daily with themselves, almost always certain that their pain will end but it is always to no avail.
Maddie, an eight year-old girl, is one of those unlucky kids. The disease causes her to suffer from one-hundred seizures a day. Nothing was working. Her doctors assigned lots of pills, they even tried surgery, but even that only had a short term effect. Liz Gorman had heard about Charlotte’s Web, on Facebook, but living in North Carolina it was not an option she and her husband wanted to consider. “That’s how much of an establishment parent I am. I chose to let someone cut into my daughter’s brain- a treatment my doctor endorsed- rather than try something that’s never been assessed in a trial,” she told Ginny Graves, who wrote the article. Three months of relief is all Maddie received from the operation.
Should medical marijuana be legal across the United States? Imagine a world where individuals who have chronic pain did not have to suffer anymore. Envision a cure for cancer, a disease many Americans are killed by daily. Picture people with severe, violent mood disorders being treated. Most people think the answers to these problems are simple and could be solved by over medicating patients. Today, there are twenty states in America who have legalized medical marijuana for specific health and medical related conditions (Medical Marijuana 1). The United States should legalize medical marijuana so patients who suffer from chronic pain can be treated, cancer could be cured, and mood disorders can be treated.
attempt and came to terms with the realization she would have to continue this medication for the
Abraham Lincoln said, "Prohibition goes beyond the bounds of reason, in that it attempts to control a man 's appetite by legislation, and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes.” This statement is still relevant in today’s society regarding the illegal use of marijuana. Citizens for the legalization and regulation of marijuana have proposed that legalization would reduce the profits of criminals, direct law enforcement dollars to more serious crimes and gain a new source of tax revenue (Government of Canada, 2016). People against legalizing marijuana argue that is not a harmless drug. They believe that legalizing it might encourage more people to use it recklessly, predominantly youth and that organized crime would continue to find a way to thrive (Shireen, 2016). In Canada, the legalization of marijuana would have far-reaching benefits from a medical stand point in treating illness and economically by increasing revenue for government, creating legitimate business opportunities and job creation.
Is it possible for an illegal drug to be deemed legal for medical purposes? Well for an illegal drug like marijuana, that is the question. There are currently many people who use marijuana legally to suppress their illness. Marijuana should be allowed for medicinal purposes.
We have all heard it over and over again, listening to everyone go on about how its wrong and its not healthy, but honestly people would not act they way they do if they cared what everyone else thought. This pertains especially to those of you who smoke marijuana. If marijuana users actually cared what everyone else thought, they would not be using it, even though it is illegal marijuana is one of the most attainable illegal substances out there. If marijuana is so attainable, and so many people like to indulge in using it then why has it been so hard to get it legalized? Marijuana can be extremely beneficial in several ways. Medical marijuana has many uses, its helped in easing pain, side effects of chemotherapy, and it can also
Marijuana is a cannabaceae plant, which has always been associated with negative connotations until recently, when it has been discovered that this plant may be used to cure diseases and improve a country economy. Thus, the American opinion is split on the question of “Marijuana Legalization”. In fact, a survey undertaken by CNN/ORC International Poll states that 55 % of Americans believe that the use of marijuana should be legal, while only 44 % think it should be illegal (CNN). I also share the American majority opinion since there is some evidence that marijuana yields positive results.