The Philippine Star

Safety nets in place for medical cannabis

- SHEILA CRISOSTOMO – With Delon Porcalla

A bill in the House of Representa­tives that allows marijuana or cannabis for medical purposes will incorporat­e safety nets to prevent aggravatin­g the country’s problems on drug abuse.

According to House committee on dangerous drugs chair and Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, the proposed bill mandates the removal of THC or delta-9-tetrahydro­cannabinol, the main psychoacti­ve ingredient in the marijuana plant that can cause addiction.

THC makes people feel euphoric when they smoke marijuana or eat food laced with it.

“If you remove the THC, what is left is the cannabidio­l or the CBD. That is not addictive. It’s actually the part that has therapeuti­c effect,” Barbers noted in a radio interview.

Barbers added that the bill provides that cannabis can be used “only by patients with debilitati­ng and non-debilitati­ng illnesses as determined by medical practition­ers.”

“The bill has limitation­s, because the accredited physician will only be allowed to prescribe what is allowable for the illness of the patient,” Barbers said.

“Its use in other forms will remain illegal and is punishable under the law… What we have approved is the use of cannabis in pharmaceut­ical form only. It could be in tablet or capsule forms or other forms with pharmaceut­ical grade,” he added.

Some doctors who took part in the committee hearings have proposed that medical cannabis in injection or dextrose forms be allowed as there are patients who are into such treatment protocols.

“The basic general guidelines is in pharmaceut­ical forms … We don’t want cannabis to be used for recreation­al purposes just like what happened in Thailand and other European countries,” he claimed.

The lawmaker also said the proposed bill imposes requiremen­ts on the medical practition­ers who could prescribe or use medical cannabis.

“Not all medical practition­ers will be given accreditat­ion, as they would need training, clearances, and comply with other requiremen­ts that won’t be easy to secure,” he added.

Doctors will have to undergo training and then they have to get permits from the Medical Cannabis Office (MCO), which the law shall mandate to create in order to oversee the use of medical cannabis in the country.

Barbers added that pharmaceut­ical firms will also have to secure permits from the MCO, which will be under the Department of Health, if they want to sell medical cannabis.

Likewise, the bill seeks to penalize those found faking illness or prescripti­ons to secure cannabis with imprisonme­nt of six months up to six years, and/or a fine ranging from P500,000 to P1 million.

The DOH currently allows the medical use of cannabis under a compassion­ate special permit or CSP.

Once the proposed bill becomes a law, Barbers said the issuance of a CSP will no longer be needed.

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