BBC News, West Midlands

A preacher who fought with hashish to permit her son's epilepsy to deal with her son died on the age of 45 after the analysis of most cancers.
The son of Hannah Dicon of Kenilworth, Warvikshire, Alyfi, can have 150 tour every week earlier than taking medical canbis.
In 2018, his household celebrated with different campaigners as authorities Drug use legalized,
Ms. Decon's web site mentioned: “We are heartbroken to share that Hanna Decon died on Tuesday 6 May, who was surrounded by people who loved her after a minor and cruel illness.”
It mentioned that she was “remarkable, firm, firm and fierce kind”.
“His fight to find a treatment for his son Alfi's rare and severe epilepsy led to a success that changed his life and eventually changed the law.”
About six weeks in the past on Instagram, Ms. Dekon mentioned that to focus a full deal with her well being, she was entering into the Medcan Family Foundation's chair and trustee, which works from households to succeed in “life-saving cannabis derived drugs” from households.
She mentioned she was briefly stepping again from her obligations with maple tree consultants, describing herself as a gaggle of UK Medical Cannabis specialists and Medical Canbis Clinician Society.

When he grew to become the middle of alphi and campaigns for using hashish oil on the age of seven.
When did it come when Ms. Dicon petitioned the federal government in March 2018, when she was given a cannabis-based drug within the Netherlands, after her situation improved, the place it was authorized,
In 2022, Ms. Dekon mentioned that her son, then 10, was free from seizure for 2 years since utilizing medical hashish.
The assertion on his web site acknowledged that he “changed the lives of thousands of patients and families, never stopping for better access to his work, better care and better understanding of medical cannabis”.
It states: “More than anything, Hannah's most proud and important role was a mam.”
The web site additionally known as its companion, Drew “destructive disadvantages”, and was “impossible to keep the children in words”.
With inputs from BBC