Baltimore Sun

Pot vendors to get training

UM Pharmacy School offering online course for marijuana workers

- By Meredith Cohn

The University of Maryland School of Pharmacy is offering training to prepare prospectiv­e workers for the medical marijuana industry.

The move puts the Baltimore school in league with a few other universiti­es, including the pharmacolo­gy department at the University of Vermont College of Medicine, seeking to bring educationa­l standards to a growing national industry that grapples with evolving science and uncertain legal standing.

“We wanted to be there as a resource,” said Magaly Rodriguez de Bittner, a pharmacy professor and executive director of the school’s Center for Innovative Pharmacy Solutions, which has begun signing up potential workers for training.

“If you’re going to be dispensing,” she said, “let’s make sure your staff is trained in best practices to do it safely and effectivel­y.”

The pharmacy school will offer classes through its online platform toward certificat­ions required under the state’s medical marijuana law for those involved in the business. It’s partnering with the advocacy group Americans for Safe Access on the certificat­ion program. That organizati­on will provide the instructor­s and the curriculum, which the school vetted and adjusted.

Training doesn’t mean an endorsemen­t of using marijuana by the school, a well regarded institutio­n founded in 1841, Rodriguez de Bittner said. Medical marijuana is not approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

The training is consistent with the school’s mission to provide education to health care providers, even if the science and government regulation has yet to catch up with demand, she said.

Few universiti­es even support research into medical uses for cannabis, largely because accessing the plant is restricted by federal law that categorize­s it the same as heroin and LSD. And though Maryland, 28

other states and Washington, D.C., have made medical marijuana legal, the administra­tion of President Donald Trump has signaled it could increase enforcemen­t efforts.

Some large health systems in Maryland are concerned enough to ask their doctors not to recommend the drug, including LifeBridge Health and MedStar Health. Johns Hopkins Medicine and the University of Maryland Medical System are formulatin­g policies.

Maryland’s medical marijuana rules don’t obligate doctors to get specific training before prescribin­g cannabis, but like other states it does require growers, processors, dispensari­es and laboratori­es to be “certified,” said Patrick Jameson, executive director of the Maryland Medical Cannabis Commission.

The burden will be on businesses to ensure there is training relevant to a person’s position, and there will be inspection­s, he said. The focus will be on safety, security and record keeping, but workers in each type of operation have more specific requiremen­ts.

“There are numerous training requiremen­ts for those people working in the industry,” Jameson said. “Grower agents, processor agents and dispensary agents have specific training requiremen­ts” listed instate law, he said. “Dispensary agents have even more requiremen­ts.”

The commission doesn’t endorse any particular certificat­ion program, though the agency website for a time included a link to one but subsequent­ly removed it.

The pharmacy school’s partnershi­p with Americans for Safe Access gives the nonprofit advocacy group “immediate legitimacy” for its courses, said Shad Ewart, a professor at Anne Arundel Community College, who teaches a course about the marijuana industry for credit but not yet industry certificat­ion.

He said the school also benefits because officials there had to do little leg work in developing a curriculum that could have taken months or years to produce on their own. (University officials said they reviewed the content and made it conform to educationa­l norms.)

Still, Ewart understand­s many colleges and universiti­es don’t want to jeopardize federal funding for research, student loans or other programs by wading into the medical marijuana arena. He said there was a need, and in his case, demand particular­ly from students who wanted to launch their own businesses. He said he steers students to focus on ancillary operations such as security, marketing, accounting and retail.

“If the legislatio­n says you must have fencing with video surveillan­ce, well that’s good for the fencing and video industries,” he said.

Jahan Marcu, chief science officer for Americans for Safe Access, said the group has been offering training since 2002 when there were approximat­ely 11 dispensari­es around the country. Instructio­n initially focused only on “survival,” which meant how to handle law enforcemen­t.

Now that there are several thousand businesses, the training has evolved to match what’s required by states that allow medical marijuana for each type of operation from growing and processing to retailing and laboratory testing, he said. Courses offer instructio­n about laws and regulation­s; the latest evidence on uses for medical marijuana; plant and product con- sistency; pesticides; sanitation; operating procedures; labeling, inventory control and record keeping; and other relevant informatio­n.

On the Maryland site, 30-hour certificat­ion courses are being offered for $450 to $750.

Marcu said his group is not the largest marijuana educator, though it’s not clear anyone is keeping track. Among others offering instructio­n are Cannabis Training Institute, THC University and Green Cultured. In addition to such new “universiti­es” dedicated to medical marijuana certificat­ion, there are some medical societies and health department­s offering training.

The university affiliatio­n, Marcu hopes, will bring some accountabi­lity and possibly standards that others could adopt.

Rodriguez de Bittner said since launch of the training site, there has been interest from potential workers in Maryland, West Virginia, California and Washington, D.C.

“There is so much out there,” she said. “We’re trying to partner and provide courses based on the best evidence — as it develops.”

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