Category: Addiction News

  • California Mental Health Workers To Take Part In Indefinite Strike

    California Mental Health Workers To Take Part In Indefinite Strike

    The employees would like patients’ wait times to be cut, as well as increased access for those looking for therapy.

    A union representing mental health workers announced Monday (June 3) that they will be taking part in an indefinite strike beginning Tuesday (June 11) due to unaddressed concerns about patient care. 

    The union represents about 4,000 Kaiser Permanente workers from more than 100 California facilities, according to The Sacramento Bee.

    The Bee adds that the National Union of Healthcare Workers is working on a new labor contract and says the employees walking out would like wait times for patients to be cut, as well as increased access for those seeking therapy. 

    “We have been working between sessions on some short-term, relief-type efforts,” Kenneth Rogers, a Kaiser psychologist, told the Bee. “but really the problem with us not accepting their last offer was there is no accountability for the patient care and work issues that we had addressed.”

    On May 23, Janet A. Liang, the president of Kaiser’s Northern California Region, and Deborah Royalty, chief administrative officer of the Permanente Medical Group, reportedly made an offer to “provide immediate relief to staffing shortages and constraints in appointments.” 

    Their offer included a number of actions for the coming 30 days, including expanding recruiter numbers, having a temporary agency focus on crisis intake, scheduling on-call staff for emergency departments, providing more staff for scheduling, and more. 

    “We believe these changes will make meaningful, immediate improvement in your daily office schedule,” Royalty and Liang stated in their letter, according to the Bee. “However, these actions are just the beginning, and so together we need to innovate and collaborate to design an integrated model of evidence based care that truly makes Kaiser Permanente the best place to receive care and best place to work in mental health.”

    Despite their efforts, Rogers tells the Bee that management hasn’t included these offers in the contract. He says one of the workers’ main requests is that their schedule booking requirement decreases from 90% of the time to 80% so that they have more time to respond to emails, take notes, check in with parents of minors, and more. 

    “We can’t wait any longer to fix this problem,” Kaiser therapist Alicia Cruz said in a statement. “I work with young people who are suicidal and self-harming, and our group sessions are so crowded that children and their parents have to sit on the floor. We just don’t have the resources at our clinic to provide the services these people need.”

    According to the National Union of Healthcare Workers, the union also plans to attend a rally for mental health in Sacramento on Wednesday, June 12. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Handbag Maker Celebrates 3 Years Of Helping Employees Stay Sober

    Handbag Maker Celebrates 3 Years Of Helping Employees Stay Sober

    All of the proceeds from the bags that the nonprofit company sells are used to pay employees’ salary and benefits.

    For three years, every employee at Unshattered, a non-profit bag maker in Poughkeepsie, New York, has stayed clean and sober. 

    Although that may not be remarkable at some workplaces, it’s amazing considering that all of the women who work at Unshattered are in the early stages of recovery. 

    “You picture devastation and addiction. That was their lives,” Kelly Lyndgaard, who founded the organization, told Chronogram in January. “They’ve chosen to get well, chosen to do the hard work to get back on their feet.”

    Unshattered provides women in recovery with job training and a career path that leads to a full-time job, with benefits. Using up-cycled materials like old army uniforms or car upholstery, the women make handbags and other totes. The idea is simple, but life-changing. This week, the organization is celebrating three years of 100% sobriety for all employees, according to the Daily Freeman

    Dea Tobias has been with the organization since November 2017. She connected with Unshattered after completing rehab at Hoving Home, a treatment center that partners with the organization. Since then, she’s been sober and finds purpose in making beautiful bags and connecting with other women who have overcome addiction. 

    “It’s about women like myself, my beautiful handbags and learning to live,” she said. 

    Having a steady job allowed her to stay clean after her stay in rehab ended. “I didn’t know what my next step was but I knew that going back to doing the things that I used to do wouldn’t work,” she said. 

    Instead of returning to the streets, Tobias was able to secure a full-time job at Unshattered. “It’s truly amazing here,” she said. “I’m around the ladies that know my struggle. They know what I’ve been through and they relate.”

    When a woman has completed a recovery program, she can apply for a 10-week internship at Unshattered, learning skills like design and sewing. When the internship is up, the woman can decide if she is ready for full-time employment, Lyndgaard said. 

    “It’s not about me deciding whether or not I want to hire you. It’s: are you willing to do the work that it takes to create employment for yourself and drive enough value in revenue to the team?” she said. 

    All of the proceeds from the bags that Unshattered sells are used to pay employees’ salary and benefits. Administrative costs are covered through fundraising, Lyndgaard said. 

    The president of Hoving Home, Beth Greco, said that Unshattered has provided a continuum of care for women in early recovery. 

    “[Recovering women] can finish our program, but there has to be a next step,” she said. “What Unshattered has done is given us a very viable next step for some of the women.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • "New York Times" Fact-Checks Elizabeth Warren’s Stance on Legalization

    "New York Times" Fact-Checks Elizabeth Warren’s Stance on Legalization

    Warren is now pro-legalization but the record shows that this was not always the case.

    A new article by the New York Times fact-checks Senator Elizabeth Warren’s comments regarding marijuana legalization.

    In April 2019, the senator, who is currently a 2020 Democratic candidate for president, told a CNN town meeting that she “thought it made a lot more sense for Massachusetts to go ahead and legalize marijuana” instead of decriminalizing it, which the state passed in 2008.

    However, the Times found that Warren’s declaration was somewhat exaggerated, and pointed to comments made in 2011 and 2012 that appeared to show reluctance towards embracing full legalization.

    At the town hall meeting in April, Warren was responding to a student’s question about her stance towards legalization by noting that she “supported Massachusetts changing its laws on marijuana,” and believed that legalization was a more effective measure than decriminalization.

    The Times considered her comment an “exaggerated” version of her actual stance at various times in the past.

    During the Senate Democratic primary debate in October 2011, Warren actually opposed legalization. “Medical marijuana is one thing, but [legalization] generally, no,” she said. A year later, she declined to offer an opinion on the issue during an interview with the Associated Press, but later voiced her support for medical marijuana during an interview for Boston radio.

    In 2015, Warren was asked by Boston Globe reporter Joshua Miller about her previous opposition to legalization efforts. She told Miller that she was “open to it” after hearing about legalization measures in other states, and reiterated her willingness to consider legalization a year later when asked about her position on Question 4, a legalization initiative on the November 2016 ballot.

    The Times piece found that Warren’s statements on various subjects were largely true, including the decline of the minimum wage and her wealth tax plan, though it took issue with her description of Democratic support for said plan as “huge.”

    Warren’s current support for legalization puts her on equal footing with the majority of her fellow Democratic candidates, including Senators Cory Booker, Kirsten Gillibrand, Amy Klobuchar, Kamala Harris and Mayor Pete Buttgieg, as well as former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro. 

    Former Vice President Joe Biden supports decriminalization efforts, criminal record expungement for marijuana charges and federal research into cannabis, but has stopped short of backing legalization, a position he shares with two other Democratic candidates, former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper and Senator Sherrod Brown.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dank Recovery Memes And The Healing Power Of Humor

    Dank Recovery Memes And The Healing Power Of Humor

    The memes inject humor into even the darkest subject matter—overdosing, rehab, heroin withdrawals, domestic abuse and more.

    In the age of social media, it’s easy to find communities of people who share even the most obscure common interest. This is especially true for people who hesitate to openly share that part of their life with just anyone. Like people who are living with, or are recovering from, addiction.

    Dank Recovery Memes is just one example of a social media channel that has gained popularity through its humorous take on the experience of living with addiction. Created in 2015 by Timothy Kavanagh, its Facebook page (where it all began) now has more than 726,000 followers. It has a presence on Instagram as well.

    As a heroin user in recovery himself, Kavanagh, 35, found a community of people online who craved the same humor when it came to their shared experience. “Through social media I found other people that were sober, had good recovery, but had the same kind of sense of humor,” Kavanagh told BuzzFeed News.

    Kavanagh built his seven years of recovery around total abstinence. He won’t drink, smoke or use methadone because it will trigger a relapse. But he emphasizes that his recovery may not look like the next person’s. It is unique to him.

    The content posted on Dank Recovery Memes injects humor into even the darkest subject matter—overdosing, rehab, heroin withdrawals, domestic abuse and more.

    “I had to reconcile the fact that I can have a really fucked-up sense of humor but not be a fucked-up human being,” Kavanagh told the Daily Dot last month. “I’m very awkward in a fun way. I’ll go out to eat and the waiter will say, ‘Can I get you a beer?’ And I’ll say, ‘I can’t. I’m allergic. I break out in track marks.’ The waiter will just look at me like oh my god…”

    While plenty of his social media followers have reached out to Kavanagh to thank him for providing this space to relate to others, others don’t find his brand of humor particularly helpful, including experts interviewed by BuzzFeed News and the Daily Dot. But while they were reluctant to praise his efforts due to the graphic and “offensive” nature of his posts, they did acknowledge the importance of finding connection in recovery.

    While the content on Dank Recovery Memes may be offensive to some, its greater purpose is to bring together a marginalized community through humor. And for “normies” who come across these memes, it’s a humanizing glimpse inside the world of people living with addiction.

    “There are other people like me who are sober right now who don’t know you can be sober but still laugh,” said Kavanagh. “Being OK with your sense of humor and laughing at your past is a form of self-forgiveness. It helps remove the shame, stigma, and isolation that comes with addiction.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Ivan Moody Counts Rob Halford, Jon Davis Among His Sober Supporters

    Ivan Moody Counts Rob Halford, Jon Davis Among His Sober Supporters

    “No matter where he was in the world, he picked up, left me messages, he sent me cards,” Moody said of the Judas Priest singer.

    Ivan Moody, the lead singer of the metal band Five Finger Death Punch, has had a hard road to achieving sobriety, but he currently counts metal legend Rob Halford as one of his sober supporters, as well as Jonathan Davis from Korn.

    As Moody explained on The Jasta Show, “Rob is actually one of my—and I hate to put it this way—sober coaches. He’s been sober now for almost forty years. And when I went through recovery, and even my bandmates and I weren’t talking, Halford was on the phone with me. I got two 10-minute phone calls a day, and Halford was one of them every single day. No matter where he was in the world, he picked up, left me messages, he sent me cards.”

    Moody added that “Jonathan Davis was the same way—he was very supportive of me.”

    Halford is considered one of the best in the genre. Moody said, “This was coming from a kid who grew up on Judas Priest and I’m turning around and this guy is a father to me in certain ways, and very much a piece of who I am now.”

    Moody went on to tell Jasta he was “never very orthodox with [my] sobriety. Neither was J.D. or Rob, which, again, that’s what I really appreciate. I don’t go to a lot of meetings. I respect it, and I understand why other people used [them] and benefitted from [it], but for me personally, it’s just not what I need. So that was something I always looked to with guys like J.D. and Rob… that wasn’t my path and I didn’t need it.”

    Moody has reportedly been to rehab five times, and came close to death from an alcohol-related seizure. After that experience, Moody recalled, “I knew I was done during my detox. It took me seven and a half days just to detox. I couldn’t walk, I couldn’t go to the bathroom by myself, I couldn’t smoke a cigarette. I had a staff member actually sleep in the room with me for the first 28 hours just to make sure I didn’t go under. I blew a .36 when I went in, which anyone who knows anything knows means that was basically death. And I didn’t want to come out of it. I woke up the next day and I [was] pissed that I was still alive.”

    Moody ultimately realized he didn’t want his legacy to be dying from substance abuse.

    “I listen to a Linkin Park song now and I can hear [Chester Bennington] crying for help. Why did it take us so long to hear that? I want people to hear my lyrics or my melodies and say ‘that dude’s in pain.’ Or ‘that guy’s victorious over something—he overcame that substance.’”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • AA Takes Center Stage in "Love in Recovery" from BBC Radio

    AA Takes Center Stage in "Love in Recovery" from BBC Radio

    No one is well-behaved here – they cross-talk, cheat, gossip, fight – but they love each other in the way only a group of alcoholics who have bared their souls to each other can.

    Love in Recovery, an award-nominated BBC radio comedy drama set in Alcoholics Anonymous, is now available in the U.S. via Audible

    The three-season (plus Christmas Special) series features actors John Hannah, Rebecca Front, Sue Johnston, Paul Kaye, Eddie Marsan, Julie Deakin, Johnny Vegas, and Samantha Bond. It was created and written by Pete Jackson, and is based on his life experiences, but, according to him, “in an abstract way.”

    “None of the specific stories are taken from my life or anyone else’s. I certainly wouldn’t betray anyone else in recovery’s trust by drawing on any of their experiences. But what I did was take all of the facets of my own recovery — the shame and regret and hope and disappointment and confusion and so on, and invent stories to convey those things.”

    His hope in writing the series was to “explore the complexities of alcoholism, and perhaps show those who don’t struggle with it that alcoholism is in no way as simple as they might expect. I’m ten years sober and I still can’t make total sense of why I so desperately sought out oblivion for so long.”

    The cast is small, which allows a lot of character development and interaction, and most of the story takes place in their weekly AA meeting, allowing years to pass in only three seasons. 

    Many archetypes are represented. There is Andy, the self-appointed group leader, who cares more than anyone else. In a hilarious recurring bit that runs for the first two seasons, Andy is always first to the meeting to set up the chairs; he is literally the only character that does any service, and each time, he runs into the same cleaning woman who has no idea who he is. Is he here to teach dance, ceramics, have a party? She never recognizes him, and it frustrates him every time. Andy thinks nobody appreciates him or the time he puts in to making the meeting happen, and so it’s incredibly moving when they surprise him with a cake on his birthday. (This ain’t no L.A. sobriety – I mean actual day of birth.) 

    Then there is Julie, the older housewife whose husband left her due to her drinking. She has been sober several years now, “except for a few slips.” Julie’s unlikely friendship with Danno, a young gay man with a chest tattoo he is so terrified of revealing to his new boyfriend that the rest of the group thinks he’s talking about AIDS when he alludes to it, demonstrates another kind of love in recovery. As it says in the book, “we are people who would not normally meet.” 

    In the first episode, Fiona walks into her first AA meeting ever, not sure she is an alcoholic but sure something needs to change. Fiona, a high-powered banker sick of embarrassing herself at business functions and waking up in strange places, becomes a stellar AA after a lot of initial resistance, humbling herself by working as a receptionist. Fiona doesn’t relapse on booze during the series, but does (spoiler alert) cheat on her fiancé, Simon, right before their wedding with a man who treats her like garbage, a classic alcoholic move we can all relate to – self-sabotaging when life is going well in order to have control of the inevitable rug coming out from under us. 

    Simon is not an alcoholic, just a normal guy who was ordered to go to meetings for six weeks for drunk driving (though Brits call it drink driving, which, I promise, will inadvertently crack you up every time, and, if you’re like me, you’ll repeat it out loud and giggle more) and stays for the camaraderie and love. Simon shows us the difficulty that normal people have in understanding us alcoholic/addicts, and also teaches Fiona unconditional love. He gets frustrated with her extreme self-centeredness, but he believes in their love so deeply that they persevere.

    Unlike people in the U.S., Brits are known for being quite reserved, something my ex-patriot friends living in London found hard to get used to. This reticence makes what happens in the rooms of AA even more of a departure from everyday life. As Jackson says, “I have been shocked, and thrilled, by how quick some Americans are to open up and get to the heart of things. That’s why AA is an extraordinary place (in the U.K.) sometimes. Once the doors are closed, people open up and talk about themselves and their experiences in a very un-English way. And perhaps because it’s been bottled up so long, it often comes flooding out in an extraordinary way.”

    No one is well-behaved here — they cross-talk, cheat, gossip, fight — but they love each other in the way only a group of alcoholics who have bared their souls and hopes to each other can. We learn about their children, their extended families, their generational trauma and alcoholic mothers, their codependencies, and of course, the war stories. It’s impossible to listen to this and not fall in love.

    While listening, I often wished it was a television show; I wanted so badly to see the characters’ faces and watch their interactions. Jackson chose radio because “The freedom you’re given on radio is extraordinary. The commissioners and execs don’t read scripts or give notes, so you can go away and do exactly what you want, which, for something as personal as this, was very important, I thought. Myself and producer Ben Worsfield (who’s a bit of a genius and without whom the show wouldn’t exist) would sit and talk about the things I wanted to explore, put together a bit of an outline and then I’d go away and write it. Then we’d get the cast together and record it. It was incredibly streamlined and free. Also, radio draws the listener in. It requires a little more concentration I think, so people are more involved, and feel almost part of the group.”

    He isn’t wrong. Having to imagine the visuals requires a bit more work, but it did draw me in and I felt close to the characters. Having the audio alone was somehow more intimate than watching video; there was no digital screen separating me from everyone. I don’t know what this series would have been like on TV, but it doesn’t matter. It’s perfect the way it is. I fell in love with these characters, and I know you will too.

    You can download Love In Recovery here.

    And follow Pete Jackson on Twitter, to see what he comes up with next: @PeteJackson79.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Fishermen Reel In $1 Million In Cocaine

    Fishermen Reel In $1 Million In Cocaine

    “We trolled past it. Every time we passed it we caught a fish,” one of the fishermen said.

    A pair of South Carolina fishermen had the catch of a lifetime on Sunday when they reeled in a bundle of cocaine worth about $1 million. 

    “We trolled past it. Every time we passed it we caught a fish,” one of the men told WCSC. In fact, a school of mahi-mahi, a popular catch with the fishermen, were swimming around the bundle.

    Before they packed up their rods and reels for the day, the duo decided to see what was in the package. They managed to snag the floating debris and pull it toward their boat. 

    When they saw the drugs inside, they contacted the Coast Guard. The agency alerted the North Charleston Police Department, which had officers meet the fishermen back at their marina. The police officers estimated that the bundle contained 30 to 50 kilos of cocaine, estimated to be worth $750,000 to $1 million, according to Coast Guard Lt. j.g. Phillip VanderWeit. 

    VanderWeit said that the boat was about 70 miles southeast of Charleston, an area where such a significant drug find is not common. 

    “It definitely doesn’t happen off the Charleston coast every day,” he said. “It’s a bit more common further south, whether in the Caribbean or the south Pacific.”

    Authorities will investigate the origins of the drugs. 

    In January, a fisherman in the Florida Keys also found a bale of cocaine, although that catch only had an estimated worth of $500,000, according to authorities. In that case, the drugs were floating beneath the dock when the man returned from a day of fishing. 

    In December 2017, the Coast Guard rescued a sea turtle that had become ensnared in more than 1,800 pounds of cocaine, worth about $53 million. 

    “After a period of lengthy questioning, it was determined the turtle did not have any useful information. We released him on his own recognizance after he agreed not to return to these waters again. #turtlesmuggler,” the agency tweeted at the time

    They then followed up with a more serious tweet about the prevalence of cocaine coming into the United States. 

    “In all seriousness, we love our sea creatures and do everything we can to help them when we see them in distressed situations. Additionally, during this patrol nearly seven tons of illicit narcotics with a street value over $135 million was confiscated.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Takedown Of "Malibu Rehab Guru" Christopher Bathum Chronicled In Amazon Series

    Takedown Of "Malibu Rehab Guru" Christopher Bathum Chronicled In Amazon Series

    Ahead of its May 30th release, a former business partner of Bathum’s tried halting the publication of Bad Therapist.

    The story of the “predatory Malibu rehab guru” who sexually assaulted clients under the care of his Community Recovery chain of treatment facilities is chronicled in a new publication—and it’s already whipping up controversy.

    Bad Therapist is the first of a 6-part series called Exposure published by Amazon Original Stories. But ahead of its May 30th release, a person who was interviewed for the book tried halting its publication.

    The Blast reported on May 28 that it obtained a cease and desist letter sent to Amazon by Cliff Brodsky, a former business partner of Christopher Bathum. After being cheated out of a significant investment, Brodsky helped bring down Bathum, a fraud who was once respected in the addiction-recovery community.

    Brodsky was interviewed by author Evan Wright for the book, but later claimed that Wright did not have his permission to publish the information that he provided.

    Despite his efforts, Amazon went ahead and published Bad Therapist.

    “I’m not sure why Brodsky feels I need his permission to write about him,” Wright told The Blast. “He sought out and spoke to journalists—to me and others—for a story that he has been a part of for years through his business ties with Bathum, civil litigation, his social media campaigns and his prior interviews that appeared in print, on TV and in other media.”

    Meanwhile, Bathum is awaiting trial for an alleged $176 million insurance fraud. The luxury rehab “guru” was convicted in 2018 of sexually assaulting seven women while operating the Los Angeles-based Community Recovery.

    Bathum built Community Recovery—one of the fastest growing rehab chains in the U.S.—as a “luxury rehab for the people” and gained respect in the industry. But it began to come undone after a 2015 exposé by LA Weekly reporter Hillel Aron revealed that Bathum had quite a few skeletons in his closet. Bathum was never a psychotherapist. He never completed college. He was a pool cleaner before working in the rehab industry.

    And even as he appeared to help clients overcome substance use disorder, he himself abused meth and heroin. Wright claimed that not long before Aron’s story had published, “Bathum had overdosed in a Malibu motel while shooting drugs with patients.”

    Bathum’s sexual misconduct—allegations of abuse and sexual assault—was also revealed in Aron’s report, including a claim by a former patient that he offered her drugs in exchange for sex.

    Other Community Recovery clients also came forward with allegations of sexual assault.

    Wright warns, “Absent reforms, there are countless Bathums out there, running their rehabs, waiting to help a loved one close to you.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Community Of Responders Campaign Aims To End Overdose Deaths

    Community Of Responders Campaign Aims To End Overdose Deaths

    The program’s goal is for naloxone to be deployed within six minutes of an overdose starting, drastically increasing the chances of the victims’ survival.

    A new campaign growing out of Green, Ohio aims to turn community members into lifesaving first responders who are ready to act in case of an opioid overdose. Combining the efforts of Cover2 Resources, NaloxBox, NaloxoFind, Project DAWN and ODMAP, the Community of First Responders (CFR) is the first of its kind in the U.S.

    CFR was organized by Greg McNeil, founder of Cover2 Resources. McNeil lost his son, Sam, to a heroin overdose and has since dedicated his life to combating the epidemic of opioid overdose in the country.

    His latest endeavor began early this year when he met one of the creators of NaloxBox—wall-mounted boxes similar to those containing AEDs but that contain naloxone, an opioid overdose reversal drug. These boxes can be installed anywhere, including public buildings and businesses.

    McNeil was then connected to the founder of NaloxoFind, an app that allows anyone to find naloxone locations in the area. Combining these two just made sense, but McNeil’s primary concern was that ambulances often take too long to reach individuals suffering an overdose. 

    “When a 911 call comes in about an overdose, first responders have six minutes to respond before there is brain damage,” McNeil explained to The Fix. “In 10 minutes, they’re gone.”

    For maximum life-saving potential, McNeil came up with the idea to recruit members of the public to keep naloxone on their person and respond to overdose cases after being alerted via text message when one is reported nearby. The hope is that this program will allow naloxone to be deployed within six minutes of an overdose starting, drastically increasing the chances of the victims’ survival

    Green, Ohio will be the testing ground for this program. McNeil had worked previously with Green Mayor Gerard Neugebauer, who was described as being very supportive of the CFR program. NaloxBoxes have already been approved for parts of the city that are most prone to seeing overdose cases. 

    “The installations will take place over the next two weeks in five hotels along the I-77 corridor covering all three interchanges in the City of Green and at Akron Canton Airport,” said McNeil. “To the best of our knowledge, these are the first NaloxBox installations in hotels and airports in the country.”

    The official launch date for CFR is June 20, when McNeil and other leaders in the fight against the opioid crisis will host a community event presenting the new program, holding a live demonstration, and treating guests to a to-be-announced musical guest. 

    So far, the Green community has been overwhelmingly supportive of CFR even before its launch—and McNeil has set ambitious goals for its future.

    “Our immediate goal is to complete installation and training for all participating hotel and airport personnel by our event launch. After the official launch of the CFR program, our goal will be to double the number of participating businesses by the end of the year.”

    Check out the Cover2 Resources podcast for more information.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Colorado To Allow Doctors To Recommend Pot Instead of Opioids

    Colorado To Allow Doctors To Recommend Pot Instead of Opioids

    Proponents of the new law say that it will help further reduce the number of opioid prescriptions in the state. 

    Doctors in Colorado will soon be able to recommend medical marijuana to patients for any condition that doctors might traditionally have prescribed an opioid painkiller for, opening the way for patients with conditions ranging from chronic pain to dental procedures to be able to access medical pot. 

    The bill was passed with bipartisan support and signed into law by Colorado Gov. Jared Polis. It will take effect August 2. 

    Proponents of the new law say that it will help further reduce the number of opioid prescriptions in the state. 

    “Adding a condition for which a physician could recommend medical marijuana instead of an opioid is a safer pain management tool that will be useful for both our doctors and patients,” said Ashley Weber, executive director of Colorado NORML.

    Currently, doctors can only recommend medical cannabis for certain conditions, including cancer and glaucoma, although the state also allows recreational cannabis use. Under the new law, any patients 18 or older who would be eligible for an opioid prescription can receive medical cannabis instead. 

    Opponents of the measure, including Colorado physician Stephanie Stewart, said that marijuana is less understood and less tightly controlled than opioids. 

    “Our real concern is that a patient would go to a physician with a condition that has a medical treatment with evidence behind it, and then instead of that treatment, they would be recommended marijuana instead,” she said. “This will substitute marijuana for an FDA-approved medication—something that’s unregulated for something that’s highly regulated.”

    In February, Illinois launched a similar program designed to move patients from opioids to medical cannabis. Although Illinois also has a medical marijuana program, it is very restrictive.

    Illinois’ initiative—the Opioid Alternative Pilot Program—allows people who would otherwise be given an opioid painkiller to access medical cannabis without going through the state’s medical marijuana program. 

    “We’re optimistic the program will benefit many Illinois residents and offer them an alternative for managing their pain,” Conny Meuller-Moody, the program’s director, told Rolling Stone at the time. 

    Illinois doctor David Yablonsky said that the program would give doctors more leeway to help patients avoid potentially-dangerous opioids. 

    “At least we’ll have an opportunity now as physicians to work with patients to try this instead of these dangerous and potent narcotics, you know opioids,” he said. “I hope it saves lives and that people come in and have a healthy alternative.”

    View the original article at thefix.com