Surveys on medical pot detail shortage in New Mexico supply
State-commissioned surveys of New Mexico medical cannabis producers and patients show many dispensaries are encountering difficulties in meeting demands for marijuana and related products.
The Department of Health commissioned the surveys as it considers changing its limits on medical marijuana cultivation and per-patient consumption.
In results obtained Tuesday, 55 percent of producers said they have been unable to keep pace with patient demand for marijuana and related products.
Patient enrollment is surging in New Mexico’s medical marijuana program for health ailments such as cancer, chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorder, with a 39 percent jump in participation between March 2018 and March 2019. Active patients now number more than 72,000.
Of the patients surveyed, about one in four said they were unable to purchase cannabis within the past 90 days because it was out of stock. Shortages were more pronounced in Eastern New Mexico, with about 4 in 10 patients citing shortages.
The surveys of all 34 licensed producers and more than 600 patients also delved into business ambitions, product preferences among patients and overall satisfaction with New Mexico’s 12-yearold medical cannabis program.
Nearly all producers intend to expand in the future, while 6 in 10 patients say they purchase edibles — mainly chocolates, bars and gummy candies. The vast majority of patients were satisfied with the state program, while producers were more divided in their opinions.
The Health Department is crafting a new rule to determine limits on medical marijuana production after a lawsuit knocked down the previous 450-plant cap per producer.
A state district court judge ruled in November that the production limit had interfered with the beneficial use of marijuana by patients, siding with seller Ultra Health and the mother of child who is reliant on cannabis oil to treat a rare form of epilepsy.
Ultra Health, New Mexico’s largest seller, said medical cannabis sales are growing at a much slower rate than enrollment, which is up by 16 percent between March 2018 and March 2019.
The sales figures could not be independently confirmed.