Chicago Sun-Times

Panel OKs medical pot use for pain conditions

Associated Press

- BY CARLA K. JOHNSON

An advisory board voted Wednesday to add chronic pain syndrome and three other pain conditions to the list of illnesses that can be treated by marijuana in Illinois.

The state’s Medical Cannabis Advisory Board had expressed frustratio­n last month when Gov. Bruce Rauner’s administra­tion rejected its first 11 suggestion­s for expanding the list of medical conditions.

Board chair Dr. Leslie Mendoza Temple said Wednesday that she hopes the Rauner administra­tion will have a different response to the latest round of suggestion­s after dispensari­es start selling the drug, which will be later this month or in early November.

Until the budget impasse in Springfiel­d is resolved, board member Dr. Eric Christoff said, “we’re in a holding pattern, and we will carry on with our work.” But he believes the Rauner administra­tion and lawmakers will see when sales begin that marijuana is a revenue stream. The Illinois law establishe­d a 7 percent tax on marijuana sales.

“It’s a revenue stream that’s not a broad-based tax,” Christoff said before the meeting in suburban Chicago.

Other conditions up for considerat­ion Wednesday were autism, irritable bowel syndrome, osteoarthr­itis and post-traumatic stress disorder.

The Illinois law already lists 39 conditions and diseases that can qualify a patient to use medical marijua- na with a doctor’s signature, including cancer, glaucoma, HIV, hepatitis C and multiple sclerosis.

Chronic pain is an approved use in 18 of the 23 states that allow medical marijuana, but not in Illinois. A recent review of 79 studies involving more than 6,000 patients found moderate-quality evidence to support the use of medical marijuana for treating it.

The other types of pain approved Wednesday include chronic pain because of trauma, chronic post-operative pain and intractabl­e pain.

Under the Illinois medical marijuana law, the recommenda­tions next need approval by Illinois Department of Public Health Director Nirav Shah, a Rauner appointee.

 ?? | SETH PERLMAN/AP FILE PHOTO ?? An advisory board votedWedne­sday to add chronic pain syndrome and three other pain conditions to the list of illnesses that can be treated by medical marijuana in Illinois.
| SETH PERLMAN/AP FILE PHOTO An advisory board votedWedne­sday to add chronic pain syndrome and three other pain conditions to the list of illnesses that can be treated by medical marijuana in Illinois.

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