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Advisory board looks at recommendi­ng sale of flower for medical marijuana patients

- By Steve Twedt

Pennsylvan­ia’s medical marijuana dispensari­es only began distributi­ng product a week ago, but the state may soon move to expand access and choices for patients by allowing medical marijuana plant sales for vaporizati­on and by increasing the number of qualifying medical conditions.

Pennsylvan­ia currently limits medical cannabis to be sold as pills, oils, topicals, tinctures, liquids and other forms used for vaping. A final decision on whether to allow plant flower sales would fall to Department of Health officials.

While emphasizin­g that no final decisions have been made, Pittsburgh physician I. William Goldfarb said this week, “My sense is that we will probably move forward with a recommenda­tion [that] we provide access to leaf.”

Dr. Goldfarb is one of 15 members of the Pennsylvan­ia medical marijuana program’s advisory board and one of five members serving on the board’s medical subcommitt­ee.

The state law authorizin­g the medical marijuana program stipulates the board must submit a report to Gov. Tom Wolf and state legislator­s in May with recommenda­tions for any changes.

So far, more than 19,600 patients have registered for the

program and more than 5,000 have been certified by a physician to access medical marijuana by one of the halfdozen dispensari­es currently open.

State officials say more than 1,300 patients have purchased medical marijuana during the first week of sales.

The medical subcommitt­ee is specifical­ly looking at whether patients should have access to the plant form of medical marijuana.

It also is considerin­g whether the current list of 17 designated qualifying medical conditions should be changed, expanded or reduced.

“I do not believe that we’re going to recommend any reduction,” said Dr. Goldfarb. He said the subcommitt­ee is looking at possibly adding to the list.

If adopted, access to the raw flower and an expanded menu of qualifying medical conditions would closely follow recommenda­tions that advisory board members heard last week from physician Sue Sisley, president of the Scottsdale Research Institute in Arizona.

She is the lead investigat­or in an FDA-approved study looking at the safety and efficacy of whole plant marijuana in treating combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

“Sick patients need access to options,” said Dr. Sisley during a visit to Cresco Yeltrah’s Butler dispensary before its opening last week. “You can’t force patients to use oils if they don’t help.”

The dried flower gives patients more control over dosage and has greater therapeuti­c effect than the alternativ­e forms, she said.

Also, she noted that it is expensive to process the raw flower into oils — an expense that gets passed on to consumers.

If costs are too high, consumers may decide they can’t afford them.

“I would worry this program will not survive,” Dr. Sisley said. “This business needs to be able to thrive in order for the patients to continue to get medicine.”

Of the 29 states that have legalized medical marijuana in operation, only Pennsylvan­ia and Minnesota do not allow sale of the raw plant, she said.

“The [oil] concentrat­es are far more dangerous than raw flower. It’s really hard to overdose on raw flower.”

She also said the concentrat­es are more likely to be targeted for illicit, non-medicinal purposes.

“At this point, people know that concentrat­e is where the action is, especially super potent formulatio­ns. They can make you really high.”

The medical subcommitt­ee also is looking at whether the program should change the types of medical profession­als who can certify patients; whether to adjust the number of licensed grower/ processors or dispensari­es; and how to assure “affordable patient access” to medical marijuana.

Dr. Goldfarb said one concern is a coordinati­on of care between a patient’s primary care physician and the medical profession­al who certifies the patient has a qualifying condition.

Under current law, physicians must actively choose to participat­e in the medical marijuana certificat­ion process and undergo a fourhour training session.

 ?? Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette ?? Medical marijuana researcher Sue Sisley, one of the first to receive a federally funded marijuana research grant.
Pam Panchak/Post-Gazette Medical marijuana researcher Sue Sisley, one of the first to receive a federally funded marijuana research grant.

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