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Chilean pharmacies begin marijuana medicine sales in first for Latam

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SANTIAGO, (Reuters) - Pharmacies in Chile’s capital Santiago will start selling cannabis-based medicines this week, the first time such treatments have been offered by drug stores in Latin America, the companies behind the launch said yesterday.

Canadian cannabis producer and distributo­r Tilray said it had partnered with local firm Alef Biotechnol­ogy, which is licensed by the Chilean government.

Chile legalized the use of medical marijuana in 2015 and is among a number of Latin American countries gradually loosening laws prohibitin­g the cultivatio­n, distributi­on and consumptio­n of cannabis.

“By importing Tilray’s medical cannabis products to Chile we intend to ease the suffering of those in need by offering pure, precise and predictabl­e medical cannabis products,” Alef board president Roberto Roizman said in a statement.

Tilray’s T100 and TC100 products will be available at a number of pharmacies in Santiago initially, under prescripti­on. The average sale price will be $310 for a treatment that lasts around a month, a spokesman said.

Up until this week, patients in Chile could only obtain medical marijuana by importing it or from a limited number of dedicated farms set up by a charity. Chile’s Congress is debating a bill that would allow people to grow their own plants. Argentina and Colombia are following similar paths. Uruguay became a global pioneer when it legalized the cultivatio­n, distributi­on and consumptio­n of marijuana in late 2013. Pharmacies in the country will begin legal sales of recreation­al cannabis from July.

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