West View woman wants to help other families after medical marijuana helped her daughter

West View woman wants to help other families after medical marijuana helped her daughter

West View woman wants to help other families after medical marijuana helped her daughter

Days before Solevo Wellness is scheduled to open its Squirrel Hill medical marijuana dispensary, patient care consultant Annie Corbin and her colleagues are logging long hours to make sure everything is ready for its first customers.

More than most, though, Ms. Corbin has an appreciation for what legal, public access to medical marijuana will mean for families dealing with serious, chronic and possibly life-threatening medical conditions.

For her, the proof sits across the dinner table each evening at the family’s West View home.

It was nearly a decade ago that Ms. Corbin’s daughter, Arianne, inexplicably started having seizures at age 8 due to a rare birth defect. The seizures typically would be of short duration, her mother recalled, but some were strong enough to knock her to the floor.

Her doctors prescribed levetiracetam, a powerful drug for controlling seizures that can also come with serious side effects including mood changes and slurred speech. Arianne dealt with both.

“She wouldn’t talk to anyone. She was just there, someone I didn’t even recognize,” Ms. Corbin said during a break earlier this week. “I felt like it had taken my child away.”

Arianne began failing in school, while at home she would lash out at younger brother Darius, hitting and slapping him.

That description contrasts sharply with the 17-year-old Arianne who visited her mom’s work this week to preview a promotional video for Solevo in which she is featured.

This Arianne is quiet, and smiles as she reports that “seizures are less of a problem” now, having gone nearly four years without a single one. She and her brother are now “like best friends,” Ms. Corbin reports.

Arianne is also an honor roll student at North Hills High School, with aspirations to attend college and open her own flower shop someday.

“She’s been doing so well it’s like it never happened,” her mother said. “That’s amazing to me. I’ve gotten my daughter back. She’s happy, she jokes. And she’s a fantastic artist.”

The dramatic change came after Ms. Corbin — faced with the unacceptable alternatives of not treating Arianne’s seizure or losing her in a medicated fog — chose a third option.

In late 2013, the family moved to Colorado so Arianne could begin treatment with medical marijuana, initially with a non-psychoactive cannabinoid. Within a week, her condition had noticeably improved although she still experienced a few seizures until they upped the THC — the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis — in her medicine.

For the next three-and-a-half years, Arianne attended Colorado schools as she and her mother, who got a job in a local dispensary, tried to pinpoint the right level of THC for her.

With both medical and recreational use of marijuana legal in Colorado, Arianne viewed the liquid she took by eyedropper twice daily as a vitamin supplement rather than a drug, her mother said. The medication cost about $40 a month.

“She gets no high from it. She doesn’t feel any psychoactive effect.” Best of all, Ms. Corbin added, “there really haven’t been any side effects.”

Arianne said she enjoyed Colorado Springs, where she and her mother loved hiking in the mountains, but the pull of family ties also left them homesick. Asked where she’d prefer to live, she says “probably somewhere in-between so I could visit them both.”

Critical to their return was Gov. Tom Wolf’s signing the law establishing Pennsylvania’s medical marijuana program in April 2016.

A year later, the Corbin family was back, with Arianne using less effective legal hemp oil to treat her condition until they — and others who hold a qualifying certificate from the state — can purchase medical marijuana when Solevo Wellness starts selling products. A price list for those products has not been released.

Beginning Wednesday, the dispensary is hosting an open house for the public each weekday from 2 to 4 p.m. until it formally opens on Feb. 15.

Feb. 15 also marks the start of Ms. Corbin’s duties helping other local families — a task she considers more a mission than a full-time job.

“I understand the parents’ side of suffering and their fear, and I feel I’m able to give them my heart and understanding,” she said.

“I want to give other families the same chance we had.”

Steve Twedt: stwedt@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1963.

Retrieved from: http://www.post-gazette.com/business/healthcare-business/2018/02/07/Solevo-Wellness-medical-marijuana-tincture-dispensary-Squirrel-Hill/stories/201802070023

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get Involved!

Sign up now to receive updates on the LCpl Janos V Lutz Live To Tell Foundation!!

Success, You're signed up!

You are already on your way to showing your support of our Warfighters!