A TEENAGE schoolboy will today make a personal plea directly to Nicola Sturgeon, asking her for support in obtaining an NHS prescription for medical cannabis to help his younger brother, who suffers from severe and complex epilepsy.

Dean Gray, 13, will stand outside Bute House in Edinburgh at 11am with a copy of the letter he has written and delivered to the First Minister.

His brother Murray, eight, used to have hundreds of seizures a day – but he has not had a single one for more than two years since starting medical cannabis.

A campaign by the family of Alfie Dingley, six,who has severe epilepsy, in 2018 helped to secure access to medical cannabis under prescription in November of that year.

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However, despite the legal change, there has been only three NHS prescriptions for medical cannabis issued across the UK. Other families with similarly affected children have had to pay privately for the medicine at a cost of up to £2000 a month.

In his letter to the First Minister, Dean, from Edinburgh, explains the difficulties of the situation his family is facing, and he argues that they shouldn’t have the added worry of finding extra money each month – some £1300 – to meet the private medical cannabis bill.

He hopes that his letter will encourage the First Minister into action and help the other affected families in Scotland, many of whom campaign under the End Our Pain banner.

“I am writing to you about my little brother Murray. He is eight years old. He used to have really bad seizures. I hardly spent any time with my mum two years ago as she was always in hospital with my little brother,” Dean told the First Minister in his letter.

“This took a toll on me personally as I didn’t fully understand what was going on and felt anxious for my brother.

“He has not had a seizure now in two years because my mum got him cannabis oils.

“This means I get to spend more time with my mum and my brother, which I love to do.

“She is having to pay £1300 every month for this medicine. I don’t think its fair that my mum and dad have to pay this. Please can you do something to help us.”

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The plea by Dean – whose grandparents Irene Gray and Rod McNeill from Bo’ness are regular readers of The National – coincides with the three-year anniversary of the landmark decision in June 2018 when then home secretary Sajid Javid granted Alfie the first individual long-term licence to use medical cannabis in the UK.

To mark the occasion, Alfie’s mother Hannah has also written to the Prime Minister urging him to intervene. Alfie is one of the three NHS prescriptions.

In her letter, she outlines the transformational effect that having an NHS prescription has had on her son, and condemns the persistent failings of the governments and NHS structures of the devolved nations that see nearly every other affected family having to raise thousands of pounds a month.

In her letter she writes: “It soon became clear that the legal change was, however well intentioned, a complete failure, with families still denied access to an NHS prescription at every turn”.