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Cannabis oil stopped his seizures but may keep him from his football dream

Posted at 5:07 PM, May 25, 2018
and last updated 2018-05-25 17:10:54-04

C.J. Harris (Cam Gaskins, WGXA)

A high school football player who takes cannabis oil to prevent his seizures has been ruled ineligible to play in college, a decision that has sparked outrage from advocates, lawmakers and sports fans.

C.J. Harris, a standout strong safety, helped lead Warner Robins High School to the Georgia state championship game and committed to play for Auburn University next season. But he was recently notified by Auburn coaches that the NCAA will not allow him to play if he remains on cannabis oil, according to CNN affiliate WGXA.

Under NCAA guidelines, athletes are not permitted to have any tetrahydrocannabinol in their systems. Known as THC, it is one of the active ingredients in cannabis. It has some medical applications but is also psychoactive and can cause a “high.” The other active cannabis ingredient, cannabidiol or CBD, does not produce a high and is thought to offer wide-ranging health benefits, including against seizures.

The cannabis oil Harris takes for his seizures contains less than 0.3% THC, according to the label. He won’t be able to pass an NCAA drug test while on the medicine, WGXA reported.

“We urge the NCAA to review their existing guidelines on THC and explore possible exceptions to allow players under medical treatment, like C.J., the ability to fulfill their dreams of playing college football,” Phil Gattone, president and CEO of the Epilepsy Foundation, a nonprofit advocacy group, said in a statement. “We hope the NCAA would reconsider their decision and assess C.J. on his character and talent as a football player.”

C.J. Harris was thrilled to commit to play football for Auburn.

Gattone said that although he couldn’t comment specifically about Harris’ use of CBD oil to treat his seizures, the “Epilepsy Foundation is committed to advocating for people with epilepsy live their fullest lives and realize their dreams.”

“We support safe, legal access to medical cannabis and CBD if a patient and their health care team feel that the potential benefits of medical cannabis or CBD for uncontrolled epilepsy outweigh the risks,” he said.

The NCAA has not responded to a request for comment.

Harris was an eighth-grader when he suffered his first seizure. By his sophomore year in high school, he was having two or three seizures a month. Typical anti-seizure medications didn’t work, so his doctors eventually put him on cannabis oil. He has not had a seizure since he began taking it in January 2017, WGXA reported.

CBD is legal for people with seizure disorders in Georgia as well as in neighboring Alabama, where Auburn is located.

Harris planned to attend Auburn, his “dream school,” as a walk-on next season. “I saw everything lining up perfectly for me,” he told WGXA.

But that dream was shattered when he was notified by Auburn staff that the NCAA ruled him ineligible if he stayed on cannabis oil.

“You’re taking something away from a kid who worked so hard his whole life to get there, and you’re just taking it away because he’s taking a medication that’s helping him with a disability,” father Curtis Harris told WGXA.

Allen Peake, a state representative who has championed medical marijuana for children in Georgia, expressed outrage at the news of Harris’ ineligibility. “We must fix this,” he tweeted.

Heath Clark, a state representative from Warner Robins, had rejoiced at the state Capitol in February when Harris committed to Auburn, saying that the young man being seizure-free was a wonderful example of good news resulting from the legalization of medical marijuana.

“His dreams are being fulfilled. He has a future. He’s going to get a quality education at that school across the Georgia border,” Clark said at the time.

As news of Harris’ ineligibility spread Friday, Clark took to Twitter to bash the NCAA. “The NCAA needs to fix their outdated policies,” he wrote.

Others expressed a similar sentiment. Brandon Marcello, a senior writer for the website Auburn Undercover, tweeted that the“NCAA needs to do the right thing here.”

Harris had committed to Auburn in February, announcing to his Twitter followers that “God has afforded me a once in a lifetime opportunity that I could not pass up.” He told WGXA he is now looking at junior college programs or other schools not under NCAA guidelines.

He said he was speaking up for others with seizure disorders and standing in solidarity with them — to get the word out that there’s “no need for me to give up at anything I want to do in life.”

The issue is likely to come up more often as the US Food and Drug Administration considers approving an epilepsy drug that would be the first plant-derived cannabidiol medicine for prescription use in the United States.

The FDA will vote in late June on whether to approve the drug, Epidiolex, an oral solution, for the treatment of severe forms of epilepsy in a small group of patients. The FDA has approved synthetic versions of some cannabinoid chemicals found in the marijuana plant for other purposes, including cancer pain relief.