Famous Sportscaster Says Medical Marijuana Helped Him Avoid Addiction To Opiates

Jacob Redmond

Well-Known Member
Boston sportscasting icon Bob Lobel is one of the hundreds of patients in Massachusetts who say they have found an effective substitute for opioids by using medicinal marijuana.

The 71-year-old longtime television reporter and anchor has dealt with chronic pain for years, the result of numerous surgeries: He's had two knee replacements, two rotator cuff surgeries, four back surgeries and, in separate accidents, fractured the tops of both femurs.

"That was brutal," Lobel told the Herald, referencing the femur breaks. The constant pain left him taking a variety of opioids.

"My issue was strictly pain," he said. "I didn't want to take any more OxyContin or oxycodone or Percocet, for a variety of reasons. The biggest thing I was worried about was addiction. But they also made me tired and it was hard to function and I couldn't go on TV all drugged up."

Lobel said pure curiosity led him to check out a medical marijuana event several months ago at the Castle at Park Plaza in Boston. It was there he met Dr. Uma Dhanabalan of the Uplifting Health and Wellness clinic in Natick. Dhanabalan recommends patients for medicinal marijuana certificates in Massachusetts and has been a strong advocate for using cannabis as a way to treat those who might otherwise find themselves hooked on opioids.

"She told me medical marijuana could be used for pain reduction and I said, 'Hey, sign me up,' " Lobel said, adding that he had been trying to manage his pain with over-the-counter meds after committing to no longer taking opioids. "I wanted to at least try it. I wasn't interested in getting high, that's not the goal, believe me. It was really about helping with the pain, and it did."

Lobel's daughter lives outside of Portland, Ore., and set up an appointment for him to consult with a doctor there this summer. He flew out and met the qualifications for receiving a medicinal marijuana card. After getting his card, he was able to buy the cannabis. He said the whole process in Oregon took three days, but he is still waiting to get his medical marijuana card in Massachusetts.

"I don't want to have to fly across the country and deal with drug-sniffing dogs at the airport, I want to do everything legally here," Lobel said. "I just have to wait and get my card."

In the meantime, Lobel says, he has been using the medical marijuana he got in Oregon to "take the edge off" of his pain. He doesn't smoke, but instead prefers to use cannabis oil, which can be orally ingested, vaporized into the lungs, or applied topically. He also has tried forms of edible cannabis, such as candies or cookies, and says he doesn't need to take the drug every day.

Getting past the stigma of the word "marijuana" has been part of the learning process, he said.

"It's more than a reasonable alternative (to opioids) once you get past the stigma like you're under a railroad bridge smoking pot," Lobel said. "It's not perfect, and I still need to learn more about what works best for me. I just feel like it's a positive once you get past the word 'marijuana.'

"I am not saying it's the be-all and end-all," he added. "But, in terms of pain relief ... it really helps."

Lobel spent many years as a sports anchor and reporter for WBZ-TV and has called games for the Celtics and Bruins as well as the Boston Marathon and numerous other events. He's retired, but still teaches a few days a week at Salem State University and hosts a show called "Sports Legends of New England." He said he will continue to learn more about medicinal marijuana and use his daughter as a caregiver and resource.

"The whole range of what's available is incredible," he said. "When (former Red Sox pitcher) Bill Lee was talking about marijuana and his brownies back in the '70s, he wasn't kidding. He was just ahead of his time."

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News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Famous Sportscaster Says Medical Marijuana Helped Him Avoid Addiction To Opiates
Author: Chris Villani
Photo Credit: Patrick Whittemore
Website: Boston Herald
 
JUST FYI, this Boston Herald piece is a 100% ripoff from an interview Dig Boston did with Bob Lobel in April of 2015:

CANNABIS ISSUE COVER FEATURE: LOBEL PRIZE

What makes this particularly disgusting (in addition to the lazy journalistic cut-and-paste ripoff) is that the Boston Herald has been the state's #1 first and foremost voice AGAINST medical marijuana for years. They've written countless rants against mmj users, mocking their pain and ailments, calling them hippie, druggies, and worse. Now suddenly they discover a kinder, gentler voice on the topic when an iconic, headline-making, local has a compelling story to tell, and they leave out their official position that MMJ is bullshit.

Kinda makes me sick.




Boston sportscasting icon Bob Lobel is one of the hundreds of patients in Massachusetts who say they have found an effective substitute for opioids by using medicinal marijuana.

The 71-year-old longtime television reporter and anchor has dealt with chronic pain for years, the result of numerous surgeries: He's had two knee replacements, two rotator cuff surgeries, four back surgeries and, in separate accidents, fractured the tops of both femurs.

"That was brutal," Lobel told the Herald, referencing the femur breaks. The constant pain left him taking a variety of opioids.

"My issue was strictly pain," he said. "I didn't want to take any more OxyContin or oxycodone or Percocet, for a variety of reasons. The biggest thing I was worried about was addiction. But they also made me tired and it was hard to function and I couldn't go on TV all drugged up."

Lobel said pure curiosity led him to check out a medical marijuana event several months ago at the Castle at Park Plaza in Boston. It was there he met Dr. Uma Dhanabalan of the Uplifting Health and Wellness clinic in Natick. Dhanabalan recommends patients for medicinal marijuana certificates in Massachusetts and has been a strong advocate for using cannabis as a way to treat those who might otherwise find themselves hooked on opioids.

"She told me medical marijuana could be used for pain reduction and I said, 'Hey, sign me up,' " Lobel said, adding that he had been trying to manage his pain with over-the-counter meds after committing to no longer taking opioids. "I wanted to at least try it. I wasn't interested in getting high, that's not the goal, believe me. It was really about helping with the pain, and it did."

Lobel's daughter lives outside of Portland, Ore., and set up an appointment for him to consult with a doctor there this summer. He flew out and met the qualifications for receiving a medicinal marijuana card. After getting his card, he was able to buy the cannabis. He said the whole process in Oregon took three days, but he is still waiting to get his medical marijuana card in Massachusetts.

"I don't want to have to fly across the country and deal with drug-sniffing dogs at the airport, I want to do everything legally here," Lobel said. "I just have to wait and get my card."

In the meantime, Lobel says, he has been using the medical marijuana he got in Oregon to "take the edge off" of his pain. He doesn't smoke, but instead prefers to use cannabis oil, which can be orally ingested, vaporized into the lungs, or applied topically. He also has tried forms of edible cannabis, such as candies or cookies, and says he doesn't need to take the drug every day.

Getting past the stigma of the word "marijuana" has been part of the learning process, he said.

"It's more than a reasonable alternative (to opioids) once you get past the stigma like you're under a railroad bridge smoking pot," Lobel said. "It's not perfect, and I still need to learn more about what works best for me. I just feel like it's a positive once you get past the word 'marijuana.'

"I am not saying it's the be-all and end-all," he added. "But, in terms of pain relief ... it really helps."

Lobel spent many years as a sports anchor and reporter for WBZ-TV and has called games for the Celtics and Bruins as well as the Boston Marathon and numerous other events. He's retired, but still teaches a few days a week at Salem State University and hosts a show called "Sports Legends of New England." He said he will continue to learn more about medicinal marijuana and use his daughter as a caregiver and resource.

"The whole range of what's available is incredible," he said. "When (former Red Sox pitcher) Bill Lee was talking about marijuana and his brownies back in the '70s, he wasn't kidding. He was just ahead of his time."

16300.jpg


News Moderator: Jacob Redmond 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Famous Sportscaster Says Medical Marijuana Helped Him Avoid Addiction To Opiates
Author: Chris Villani
Photo Credit: Patrick Whittemore
Website: Boston Herald
 
JUST FYI, this Boston Herald piece is a 100% ripoff from an interview Dig Boston did with Bob Lobel in April of 2015:

CANNABIS ISSUE COVER FEATURE: LOBEL PRIZE

What makes this particularly disgusting (in addition to the lazy journalistic cut-and-paste ripoff) is that the Boston Herald has been the state's #1 first and foremost voice AGAINST medical marijuana for years. They've written countless rants against mmj users, mocking their pain and ailments, calling them hippie, druggies, and worse. Now suddenly they discover a kinder, gentler voice on the topic when an iconic, headline-making, local has a compelling story to tell, and they leave out their official position that MMJ is bullshit.

Kinda makes me sick.

It also pisses me off that he went to a doc named Uma who is STRINGING HIM ALONG on issuing a Massachsetts Medical Card because she has special glasses that show her the word SUCKER printed on his forehead. For qualified patients, Cannacare Docs and other doctors go online to order a card within MINUTES which will be delivered in a few days, not months.
 
:Namaste:Maybe he went to a doctor named Uma because the US born doctors are too scared of the medical board or the federales to prescribe it, even though it is legal! There is a stigma to a doctor who tries to treat chronic pain with ANYTHING! They would rather run us all out of business and decrease the competition that they might lose their patients to. That is because the they don't give a shift about their patients' comfort. MDs have become a bunch off greedy, self serving, wimps, in my eyes. They hate it when they lose patients to a doctor who really takes care of the people's pain. There are those of us, who are not afraid, who were punished and driven out of medicine for giving a damn about people, and not playing medical politics! I only go to a doctor because that is the only way I can get my hypertension treated. I get some relief from my neuropathy, but still spend nights up unable to sleep because the tingling is so severe it keeps me awake! I just get more inadequate care from doctors, who want to continue to practice medicine, and not lose their licenses. They are too scared to do their jobs right!
 
:Namaste:Maybe he went to a doctor named Uma because the US born doctors are too scared of the medical board or the federales to prescribe it, even though it is legal! There is a stigma to a doctor who tries to treat chronic pain with ANYTHING! They would rather run us all out of business and decrease the competition that they might lose their patients to. That is because the they don't give a shift about their patients' comfort. MDs have become a bunch off greedy, self serving, wimps, in my eyes. They hate it when they lose patients to a doctor who really takes care of the people's pain. There are those of us, who are not afraid, who were punished and driven out of medicine for giving a damn about people, and not playing medical politics! I only go to a doctor because that is the only way I can get my hypertension treated. I get some relief from my neuropathy, but still spend nights up unable to sleep because the tingling is so severe it keeps me awake! I just get more inadequate care from doctors, who want to continue to practice medicine, and not lose their licenses. They are too scared to do their jobs right!

I feel your pain (well, not literally,) but I have to say the doctors, nurses and technicians I met over the last two weeks at a teaching hospital in Massachusetts have been nothing but accepting and interested in my wife's medical marijuana. She could not self administer while in the ER or ICU (4 times) recently, but they ALL encouraged her to continue using medical marijuana for pain. In her ICU discharge papers, Medical Marijuana is listed FIRST followed by codiene and other medications -with herbal supplements listed at the end. A few of them were quite interested in her timing and use of marijuana infused creamer alongside smoking and vaping.

Prior to her medical card (2 years ago), she had 3 different physicians (GP and specialists) who told her if she had any trouble getting a prescription from the medical marijuana specialist to have the mmj specialist contact them directly to discus why they thought she should be on medical marijuana. In our circle of experience, the Massachusetts medical professionals have been very supportive and are looking forward to a day when medical marijuana can be prescribed by any physician.
 
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