Epileptic girl, two, who is one of the first children in Britain to be prescribed medical cannabis can't get treatment because it 'will take weeks to import' – as MP vows to fly to Canada HIMSELF to get it for her

December 16, 2018  17:22

A two-year-old girl who is one of the first children in the UK to be prescribed medical cannabis faces a delay in receiving her treatment.

Jorja Emerson's father claims his epileptic daughter cannot yet have the £3,000 three-month supply of cannabis oil because of pharmacy licensing problems.

The family, from Northern Ireland, fought for weeks to secure the landmark prescription for a drug called Tilray from a private hospital in London.

But they have now been told they face a further delay in obtaining the treatment which they hope will stop her deadly seizures, which can number up to 30 a day.

One MP has called the situation an 'assault course of bureaucracy' and even suggested he would travel to Canada himself to get hold of the drugs for her.

Robin Emerson, Jorja's 31-year-old entrepreneur father, said: 'We are letting bureaucracy get in the way of saving children's lives.

'Jorja is entitled to her medication and it's legal. There should be no issue.'

She urgently needs the treatment, he added, and currently has a chest infection which is 'setting off her seizures'.

He added: 'Anything could happen.'

The family started their wait on Tuesday, when they took their daughter's new prescription to a hospital pharmacy to begin the importing process.

Jorja became one of around 200 people in the UK who have been prescribed medicinal cannabis since it was legalised on November 1.

At the time they were told it would take two weeks to import the cannabis oil from Canada, but Jorja's father now fears the process will take 'weeks or months'.

The Department of Health and Social Care has confirmed the delay is because the pharmacy didn't check export licensing in Canada, where the drug is coming from.

Health Canada has reportedly stopped issuing export certificates for December, meaning the pharmacy is struggling to get the medicine quickly.

It is not clear why Health Canada has stopped issuing the certificates or whether there are suppliers in other countries which could ship Tilray to the UK.

Pharmacies in the UK do not need new licences to be able to dispense medicinal cannabis, but they must buy the products from a properly licensed supplier.

Sir Mike Penning, MP for Hemel Hempstead and co-chair of a parliamentary group on medical cannabis, has criticised officials' slow movement in Jorja's case.

'Parents like Robin already have more than a head full, coping with the stresses and strains of caring for very sick children,' he said.

'The last thing they need is a long and tortuous process to actually get the medicine that's been prescribed.

'This assault course of bureaucracy needs sorting out once and for all.

'But in the meantime, if this prescription isn't sorted soon I'm minded to ask a small cross party group of MPs led by myself and my co-chair Tonia Antoniazzi to go and get it from Canada and give it to Robin for Jorja.'
Mr Emerson, who cares for his daughter along with her mother, his ex-partner Carly Emerson, also 31, said the treatment is 'the difference between her living and dying'.

Jorja, who is from Dundonald in County Down, Northern Ireland, suffers up to 30 seizures each day.

She was born with a rare chromosome disorder, which is not life-threatening but causes developmental delay and, when she was 10 months old, triggered epilepsy.

Now any one of Jorja's daily seizures has the potential to kill her, and Irish doctors have even said her condition is terminal.

Mr Emerson said he will not leave London until he has obtained Tilray, which will be given in the form of a few drops placed on the tongue twice a day.

British law changed on November 1 to allow specialist doctors to prescribe medicines derived from cannabis and containing the chemical THC.

THC is the brain-affecting compound in cannabis which makes people high, and is what has made marijuana-based medicines illegal in the past.

Despite being legalised, cannabis oil remains medically unlicensed – meaning there are no guides for prescribing it – and doctors have been reluctant to hand it out.

And, so soon after the rule change and with so few people receiving prescriptions, it isn't yet widely available through pharmacies in the UK.

The Government spokesman added: 'There are already a range of products that can be supplied and we are working closely with a range of other manufacturers to ensure a wider range is available for specialists to prescribe for their patients.'

There are a small number of patients already receiving the treatment following lawful importation, he added.

And no Home Office import licences have been refused from appropriately licensed pharmaceutical wholesalers in relation to medical cannabis.

He would not comment on the individual case.
Cannabis for medical use was made lawful on November 1, following the high-profile cases of two other young epilepsy sufferers, Alfie Dingley and Billy Caldwell.

Those boys' parents were given special permission by the Home Office to import products they had already been using from abroad.

Earlier this week, former university lecturer Carly Barton, 32, became the first adult to be prescribed cannabis oil, to alleviate pain caused by fibromyalgia.

She used to be a fine art lecturer but developed the chronic pain condition after suffering a stroke in he early twenties.
For years she had used cannabis illegally to relieve the pain, but can now get a three-month supply for £2,500 through a private doctor and a manufacturer in the Netherlands.

But because the Home Office has to authorise the delivery, it could be weeks before Ms Barton gets her cannabis.

So, she explained, she is having to blow all of her savings on just one prescription before going back to getting it illegally.

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