No legal medicinal cannabis ‘until at least mid-2020’
People in chronic pain and the terminally ill will have to wait until at least mid-2020 to legally obtain medicinal cannabis, according to a Ministry of Health document — a wait criticised as far too long.
The Misuse of Drugs (Medicinal Cannabis) Amendment Bill, introduced by Health Minister David Clark in December 2017 under the Government’s 100-day plan, is expected to become law by March 2019.
A Health Ministry document, released under the Official Information Act to National’s associate health spokesman Shane Reti, shows it is working to a timeline that assumes a “go-live date” in mid-2020. “And this is just for the required regulations. It is highly unlikely that dispensing would begin at that point and it would almost certainly be much later. This is unacceptable,” Reti said.
National supported the Government’s bill at first reading but then pulled its support in July with its own bill in Reti’s name. National said its bill set out a more comprehensive and well-researched regime for the use of medicinal cannabis.
“The Government needs to adopt National’s bill which would make medicinal cannabis products available to New Zealanders who need them with an appropriate regime in place in a fraction of the time of their
It is highly unlikely that dispensing would begin at that point. Shane Reti
current plan.” Greens drug law reform spokeswoman Chloe Swarbrick, whose own medicinal cannabis bill was voted down in January, said her party would like to see the Government’s bill go live much sooner than mid-2020.
Swarbrick said she had been speaking to Clark and Reti to get all parties working together.
“We think that it’s important to ensure that we are getting the best possible outcomes for patients here. It’s unfortunate that politics has obviously got in the way,” she said.
Hikurangi Cannabis was the first New Zealand company to get a licence from the Ministry of Health to cultivate medicinal cannabis plants.
Managing director Manu Caddie said his company had been pushing hard to have the regulations in place six months after the law passes.
“It’s almost going to make it untenable to have a company by that stage because New Zealand will be so inundated, I expect, by overseas companies by then.”
Caddie said it was taking so long to progress that some people who made submissions on the bill would no longer be around to see the legislation in place, let alone access the drug.
“That’s a real tragedy and that’s why we need that urgent action.”
Paul Manning, a director of medicinal cannabis start-up Helius Therapeutics, said most people had been expecting a go-live date in mid2019. “We don’t understand why it will take so long to go live.”
Health Minister David Clark said: “In the interim, as a compassionate measure, the legislation introduces a legal defence for the terminally ill to use illicit cannabis. That will be available once the legislation is passed into law in coming months.”