OH: Senators Remove Pharmacist Requirement from Medical Marijuana Bill

Christine Green

New Member
Columbus, Ohio - Senators vetting a medical marijuana bill eliminated a requirement that every marijuana dispensary be run by a licensed pharmacist, expanded the definition of pain to qualify for medical marijuana and other changes cheered by medical marijuana advocates.

The Senate Government Oversight and Reform Committee added the pharmacist requirement last week as well as put the program under the oversight of the Ohio State Board of Pharmacy. The Ohio Pharmacists Association supported the change, but patient advocates said would increase patient costs and render Ohio's medical marijuana program ineffective.

The committee is expected to make small changes to the bill Wednesday morning before approving it for a full floor vote as early as Wednesday afternoon. The revised bill then would need approval from the House before heading to Gov. John Kasich's desk.

The pharmacist debate

Ernest Boyd, executive director of the Ohio Pharmacists Association, said pharmacists who have six years of specialized education are best positioned to advise medical marijuana patients.

"Pharmacists know when drug therapy is appropriate and when it isn't. 'Bud-tenders' do not," Boyd told lawmakers Tuesday.

Sen. Dave Burke, a Marysville Republican and pharmacist, said the pharmacist requirement raised concerns about patient access, and the bill has other safeguards to ensure products are safely administered.

"We're not wanting to be restrictive, we're not wanting to be burdensome but we don't want to expose people to harm," Burke said.

The proposal

House Bill 523 would allow patients with about two dozen qualifying conditions to buy and use marijuana if recommended by a licensed Ohio physician. The Ohio Department of Commerce would write the rules and regulations for who could commercially grow or manufacture products from marijuana.

Smoking and home growing are not allowed in the bill. Patients would have an affirmative defense from arrest and prosecution to possess and use marijuana before dispensaries are up and running.

Patients would have to have a doctor's recommendation and the marijuana would have to be legal under the Ohio law. Burke said the pharmacy board will also draft rules allowing patients from states with similar requirements to access Ohio medical marijuana.

"It has to fit in the framework -- you can't just bring your baggie of Colorado weed to Ohio," Burke said.

The committee's revisions

Changes made Tuesday morning:

  • Chronic and severe pain and intractable pain are two separate qualifying conditions.
  • The pharmacy board would license retail dispensaries, register patients and regulate marijuana packaging and acceptable paraphernalia.
  • The Department of Commerce would license cultivators, processors and testing labs and operate a seed-to-sale tracking system. Cultivator licensing rules would have to be written within 240 days of the bill's effective date instead of 180 days.
  • The state medical board would certify physicians for the program.
marijuana-banking11.jpg


News Moderator: Christine Green 420 MAGAZINE ®
Full Article: Senators Remove Pharmacist Requirement from Medical Marijuana Bill
Author: Jackie Borchardt
Contact: Jackie Borchardt
Photo Credit: Elaine Thompson, Associated Press
Website: Cleveland OH Local News, Breaking News, Sports & Weather - cleveland.com
 
Of course like always there was no mention of the handling of medical marijuana financial transactions within the confines of Ohio law insofar as the practice of legal banking.
 
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