Jamaica Gleaner

CAPITAL OF THE WORLD

Ja eyes becoming medical ganja wellness

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AS NEGRIL celebrated the opening of Jamaica’s first medical cannabis wellness resort last Friday, one government minister is suggesting that it is not far-fetched the country could become the medical cannabis treatment tourism capital of the world. The facility, Doc’s Place Wellness Centre and Apollon Formularie­s Jamaica, is located at West End Negril and is directed by medical doctor and cannabis clinician, Dr Stephen Barnhill. It is regarded as a Global Centre of excellence for medical cannabis therapy. Speaking at the opening, state minister in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries (MICAF), Floyd Green, said Jamaica would be unbeatable as a cannabis treatment destinatio­n, due to the quality of its medical cannabis formulatio­ns and its distinct advantage in tourism, as the island is ranked among the best tourist destinatio­ns in the world. “You can’t beat us in relation to our services industry; you can’t beat us in relation to the quality of our ganja. Now, when we are able to develop places such as Doc’s Place, where people can come to the best part of the world, they can be treated for all the things that we now know, without a doubt, cannabis is best at treating,” he said. According to him, the reality dictates that instead of having treatment dispensed in a cold, dreary part of the world, which does not aid in the wellness process, coming to Jamaica and getting a full wellness package is the better option. “That is what is on offer here today and this is our natural competitiv­e advantage. It cannot be recreated anywhere else in the world,” he added. Green said the cannabis research and developmen­t component attached to the facility, sends a clear signal that this is the direction in which Jamaica needs to go in terms of continuing to develop its strains, among other things. “We want to encourage more investors to look at this end of the industry. Yes, we understand, we want to see dispensari­es; we want to see herb houses; but where we need to make our internatio­nal mark is research and developmen­t,” he stated. He asserted that all of that feeds into wellness. “The food that you will eat and the medication­s that we would develop right here from our local strains … This is what will ensure that all over the world will continue to call the name of Jamaica in relation to ganja; but that Jamaica will be known as the medical marijuana centre of the entire world. That has to be our vision and our direction,” Green added. In his address, Dr Barnhill said the six-bedroom inn will accommodat­e people from across Jamaica and the globe; who want to be treated with medical cannabis, and will also enable the seven connected Jamaican doctors be able to make house calls. “This is a facility t world. It is a medic ness resort; it is a co We treat patients her dispensary. We have our staff, well-respec island of Jamaica. E and every single pers this facility gets a pre treatment,” he explai Members of the m include neurosurge­on Dr Marjorie Vassell, Dr Woodworth Wilso Dawes; and accordin treatment they will o

“The treatment here includes all of the food, because we change your diet to a healthy diet; we change your water; we change a lot of things about your entire body. It’s not just about medical cannabis. It’s about the overall well-being of the patient,” he explained. The facility includes a cannabis wellness massage therapy room with cannabis oil yoga as a part of the healing process; a saltwater infinity pool and seawater Jacuzzi with water pumped from the sea, as well as its processing and extraction facility and laboratory. Dr Barnhill said the facility is expected to begin clinical trials for prostate and breast cancer, and chronic inflammati­on, as soon as the Ministry of Health gives the go-ahead. He said his company will, as part of its humanitari­an outreach, establish a process whereby indigent persons from Jamaica can apply to be treated cost-free. “We will have a committee set up [and comprised] of Jamaican people, and people can apply to that committee if they can’t afford treatment, and they will be able to be treated,” he said.

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