HebrideanUltraTerfHecate on Nostr: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c93lq2lvvgeo Until recently, Jane would have ...
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c93lq2lvvgeo
Until recently, Jane would have described her family as normal, law-abiding citizens. But that changed last summer, when the full-time mum started illegally buying cannabis oil online for her daughter, Annie.
The 10-year-old has a severe, rare type of epilepsy, resistant to conventional treatments.
At her worst, Annie was admitted to hospital 22 times in 22 months. Doctors warned Jane there was a very real prospect of her daughter dying from a seizure.
Jane says she doesn't want to break the law - but the severity of Annie's condition is such that she doesn't care. We have changed their names to protect their identities.
"[Annie] deserves to be happy. She deserves to have this quality of life," Jane explains. "And if I'm breaking the law by giving her this quality of life, am I wrong or is the law wrong?"
The family cannot afford a private prescription, which costs approximately £2,000 each month from one of the many clinics that have been established since the legalisation of so-called full-spectrum medical cannabis - which includes the psychoactive ingredient THC.
Until recently, Jane would have described her family as normal, law-abiding citizens. But that changed last summer, when the full-time mum started illegally buying cannabis oil online for her daughter, Annie.
The 10-year-old has a severe, rare type of epilepsy, resistant to conventional treatments.
At her worst, Annie was admitted to hospital 22 times in 22 months. Doctors warned Jane there was a very real prospect of her daughter dying from a seizure.
Jane says she doesn't want to break the law - but the severity of Annie's condition is such that she doesn't care. We have changed their names to protect their identities.
"[Annie] deserves to be happy. She deserves to have this quality of life," Jane explains. "And if I'm breaking the law by giving her this quality of life, am I wrong or is the law wrong?"
The family cannot afford a private prescription, which costs approximately £2,000 each month from one of the many clinics that have been established since the legalisation of so-called full-spectrum medical cannabis - which includes the psychoactive ingredient THC.