Minnesota's first medical marijuana patients stepped out of clinics in Minneapolis and Eagan on Wednesday, holding hope in a bottle.
"I'm hoping for quite a bit of relief," said Tyler Lafferty, 20, of Coon Rapids, who has a full-time job, a 2-year-old at home — and debilitating pain and nausea from chemotherapy treatments for the lymphoma he's been battling for the past two years.
It was his doctor who suggested that Lafferty try cannabis, after other treatments — including oxycodone, morphine and Vicodin — failed. He walked out of the LeafLine Labs clinic in Eagan on Wednesday with a small cannabis vaporizer he hopes will keep him pain-free and functioning through the next nine months of chemo.
"They said I should be able to take this throughout the day and be safe," he said. "I'm really excited about this. I'm excited to see the results."
Medical marijuana became legal in Minnesota at the stroke of midnight Wednesday. Moments later, the state's first cannabis clinic opened its doors.
"We've been waiting a long time for this," said Kim Kelsey, standing outside the Minnesota Medical Solutions clinic in downtown Minneapolis in the early hours of Wednesday morning. She was one of three patients and caregivers eager to buy medical cannabis the moment it was legal. The clinic opened early to accommodate them.
"We decided we weren't going to make them wait an extra nine hours," said MinnMed CEO Dr. Kyle Kingsley, who opened the clinic long enough to see its first three patients, then reopened at 9 a.m. for the dozen or more patients who had booked appointments during regular office hours. "It's really an honor to serve the first three patients in Minnesota."
Kelsey held up the prescription bottle holding the cannabis pills she would be giving her 24-year-old son, Alec, later in the morning. She and other parents and patients have lobbied for years to legalize the medication. Now she will finally see whether it can help ease the seizures and symptoms of Alec's epilepsy.