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  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    9:12am, EST

    Ore. girl, 7, is medical marijuana patient

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    PORTLAND, Ore. - A 7-year-old girl suffering from leukemia has become one of Oregon's youngest medical marijuana patients.

    Mykayla Comstock's mother credits the drug with helping put the cancer into remission.

    But her father, worried about the effects of the drug on her brain development, alerted child welfare officials to the treatment.

    Mykayla was diagnosed with leukemia last spring and the marijuana eases the effects of chemotherapy, according to her mother. The girl takes a gram of cannabis oil daily, The Oregonian reported.

    "First you get hungry," Mykayla told the paper. "Then you get really funny, and then you get tired."

    Her mother, Erin Purchase, 25, administers Mykayla's cannabis with the help of her boyfriend.

    Mykayla's mother credits the drug for the leukemia's remission.

    "As a mother, I am going to try anything before she can potentially fall on the other side," said Erin Purchase, 25, who administers Mykayla's cannabis together with her boyfriend.


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    Mykayla's father, who is divorced from the girl's mother and lives in North Dakota, contacted child welfare officials, police and her oncologist.

    Jesse Comstock said his concerns were prompted by a visit with Mykayla in August.

    "She was stoned out of her mind," said Comstock, 26. "All she wanted to do was lay on the bed and play video games."

    Comstock pays child support to Purchase and covers Mykayla's health insurance, the paper reported.

    Oregon law requires no monitoring of a child's medical marijuana use by a pediatrician. 

    Three states will decide on Tuesday whether to take the unprecedented step of legalizing marijuana. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    Comstock, who says he used pot in the past, told the paper that he doesn't object to people over 16 using medical marijuana. But he worries about his daughter's well-being and the potential for addiction.

    "She's not terminally ill," Comstock said. "She is going to get over this, and with all this pot, they are going to hinder her brain growth.

    Weed wars: If states legalize marijuana, will feds still crack down or steer clear?

    Purchase believes marijuana heals, and also credits the drug for curing her stepfather's skin cancer. She herself is an Oregon medical marijuana patient.

    "She's like she was before," she said of Mykayla. "She's a normal kid."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    492 comments

    1 gram of cannabis oil is nothing compared to the opiates children may get or all the chemo drugs that are killing ALL the cells unhealthy and healthy in her body... I hope she makes a full recovery!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: life, drugs, health, oregon, medical-marijuana, leukemia, commentid-oregon
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    3:05pm, EDT

    Parade turns to vigil for Kansas teen who dies hours before homecoming

    By NBC News staff

    Heersche family

    Undated photo of Taylor Heersche

    What was supposed to be a welcome-home parade instead turned into a somber candlelight vigil for a terminally ill 15-year-old Kansas girl who died hours before she was to return home.

    Residents of the town of Mulvane had decorated Main Street with ribbons and signs in orange — the color of leukemia awareness — to welcome Taylor Heersche home Tuesday evening, The Wichita Eagle reported.


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    Taylor had been terminally ill with cancer and had told her family she wanted to be at home to die. Doctors at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City told the family she had only a few more days to live, so the plan was to release her to be with her family and friends.

    But Taylor passed away Tuesday morning at the hospital, with her parents, DeAnne and Dan Heersche, at her side.


    Instead of the parade, Mulvane residents gathered for a candlelight vigil late Tuesday to honor the Mulvane High School sophomore, the Eagle reported.

    “I’ll bet every parent says that their kid was special. But she was a real people person. There were no strangers,” DeAnne Heersche said of her daughter, according to the Eagle.

    “That kind of kid leaves a huge hole not only in our family, but in the community. We’re all going to miss her horribly.”

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    "It's still a homecoming in our eyes, it's just a different home that she's going to, a better home that she's going to, so it's more of a celebration than the grief,"  Maggie Keys, one of Taylor's classmates, was quoted as saying by KWCH-TV.

    Taylor, a sophomore at Mulvane High School, was diagnosed with the leukemia in May 2008 when she was 10.

    Taylor's leukemia had been in remission for several years following chemotherapy. But last winter the cancer returned aggressively.

    Services are Sunday at Central Community Church in Wichita, with a private burial Monday.

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    230 comments

    what a lovely,heartwarming, story. Thank you!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cancer, kansas, teen, leukemia
  • 21
    Apr
    2012
    11:36pm, EDT

    Teen accused of pulling in $17,000 through fake cancer claim

    By Gil Aegerter, msnbc.com

    A teenager claimed to be dying of cancer but is being accused of faking it to raise money, according to a report out of Texas.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The El Paso Times says that Angie Gomez, 19, was arrested Friday evening and was being held in lieu of $50,000 bail after being indicted on a theft-by-deception charge. The newspaper's website said court documents alleged that the amount was more than $1,500 and less than $20,000.

    The Times said Gomez, 4 feet 7 inches tall and weighing 65 pounds, told classmates at Horizon High School in Horizon City that she had had leukemia as a child and the disease had reappeared -- and that doctors in January 2011 gave her six months to live.


    Classmates held fundraisers and Gomez got help in forming the Achieve the Dream Foundation, ostensibly to aid families of children with cancer, according to the report.

    But six months later, Horizon City police received a complaint that Gomez did not appear to be ill, and an investigation turned up no sign that Gomez ever had cancer.

    After subpoenaing bank records for the Achieve the Dream Foundation, investigators estimated Gomez received $17,000 from fundraisers and other donations, the Times reported, saying it was unclear what happened to the money.

    The report said police thought Gomez's mother was unaware of the extent of the fundraising.

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    167 comments

    The report said police thought Gomez's mother was unaware of the extent of the fundraising. So who masterminded this sad and sorry scheme??? Mom or the kid??? This is wrong on so many levels - where to start??? Horrible!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: leukemia, horizon-city, angie-gomez, achieve-the-dream-foundation

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