Medicine Hat News

Shoppers optimistic on pharmacies selling pot

- ARMINA LIGAYA

TORONTO Shoppers Drug Mart has lined up its third cannabis supply agreement as part of its ambition to dispense the drug amid what experts say is increasing support among pharmacist­s to distribute medical pot and expectatio­ns that the regulatory framework needed will come to fruition.

The latest deal, announced Friday, is with B.C.based licensed marijuana producer Tilray Canada Ltd. to supply branded medical cannabis products and is conditiona­l upon Health Canada’s approval of Shoppers’ applicatio­n to dispense medical marijuana.

A spokesman for Loblaw Companies Ltd., Shoppers’ parent company, said it could not speculate on if, or when, it will be approved.

Current Health Canada regulation­s stipulate that the only legal way to distribute medical marijuana is through online orders shipped through the mail.

That has been the system since the new commercial scale medical marijuana system was rolled out in 2014. But with the government looking critically at marijuana policy as it approaches a summer target to make recreation­al marijuana sales legal, Shoppers is hopeful changes will also be made to medical policies.

“As the federal and provincial government­s finalize their respective cannabis frameworks, we remain optimistic that they will allow pharmacist­s in stores, in communitie­s to apply their profession­al care to medical cannabis patients,” said Loblaw spokesman Kevin Groh in a statement.

Tilray’s announceme­nt comes after Shoppers signed similar deals last year with Aphria Inc. (TSX:APH) and MedReleaf MedReleaf (TSX:LEAF).

But it also comes two days after L’Associatio­n Quebecoise des Pharmacien­s Propriatai­res representi­ng pharmacist­s in Quebec, called on the provincial government to include measures that would allow trained pharmacist­s to distribute cannabis.

Jonathan Zaid, the executive director of Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana said the pharmacy community overall is progressin­g towards support of dispensing cannabis.

“We are starting to see a shift of both the profession­al side of pharmacist­s, but also the college and regulatory side of pharmacist­s, towards support of distributi­on for medical purposes,” he said.

Meanwhile, other pharmacies have also been lining up supply agreements with licensed producers, including deals between Maricann Group Inc. and Lovell Drugs Limited and CanniMed Therapeuti­cs and PharmaChoi­ce.

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