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Colorado Medical Marijuana Doctors Face New Rules

KRISTEN WYATT   03/12/11 02:39 PM ET   AP

Marijuana

DENVER — Colorado's dispute over which doctors can recommend medical marijuana could become more confusing this week when state health authorities consider tighter limits at the same time lawmakers debate conflicting rules.

One question is whether doctors with conditions on their medical licenses – such as a surgeon being banned from surgery after developing arthritis – should be able to recommend pot.

The Colorado Board of Health also plans to flesh out how well doctors have to know patients before recommending marijuana.

The proposed regulations address what lawmakers called for last year by requiring a "bona fide" relationship between doctors and patients – designed to discourage so-called "marijuana mills" in which doctors recommend pot to people after only brief visits.

Some 1,300 people who applied for medical marijuana cards were rejected late last year by state health officials because their recommendations came from doctors with license conditions.

The doctors – and the Colorado Medical Society – argued that barring all doctors with conditions from recommending pot is too broad because many doctors' conditions don't affect their ability to prescribe or recommend drugs.

One of them is Dr. Abraham Grinberg, a 64-year-old Denver physician who once focused on neonatal care until a hand tremor made surgery impossible.

Grinberg then turned to meeting with patients about medical marijuana until dozens of them got rejection letters. Grinberg now works as a Spanish language medical translator while waiting to hear if he can treat patients again.

"Now I am looking for what to do," said Grinberg, who insists his hand tremor doesn't affect his ability to decide when to recommend marijuana.

"I really felt that was helping people, people who couldn't be helped by other means," Grinberg said. "I helped them get off painkillers and narcotics."

Grinberg wouldn't be able to go back to a marijuana clinic under regulations up for a hearing Wednesday at the Board of Health. The rules would require physicians to have "unrestricted, unconditioned" licenses before they can recommend pot.

Meanwhile, a bill awaiting a vote in the Colorado House would allow doctors with license conditions to ask the Colorado Medical Board for permission to recommend marijuana. Assuming their conditions are unrelated to recommending drugs, the doctors could write recommendations for pot.

Diana Protopapa of the Colorado Medical Society says her group prefers that approach and that marijuana shouldn't have special limitations.

"Voters in 2000 deemed that it was medicine," Protopapa said, referring to the year Colorado voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing medical marijuana. "What the medical society then wants is for marijuana to be treated like other medicine."

The proposed regulations dealing with the doctor-patient relationship would require doctors to complete "a full assessment of the patient's medical history ... including an appropriate personal physical condition."

Colorado regulators considered, but rejected, some proposals strongly opposed by pot activists. One would have required doctors to see a patient more than once before recommending pot. Another would have banned mobile pot clinics that travel from town to town.

The latter rule would have put the nonprofit Medical Marijuana Assistance Program of America out of business. The charity consists of two recreational vehicles that canvass rural Colorado, with volunteer doctors writing marijuana recommendations in places where most doctors won't suggest the drug.

The charity's executive director, Vincent Palazzotto, said that because health insurance doesn't cover medical pot, requiring multiple doctors' visits would unduly burden patients.

Pot advocates also argue that multiple visits aren't required before doctors can recommend other drugs.

"People are going to seek out marijuana either way, whether you have to see a patient once or four times. But it does affect the cost," Palazzotto said.

The proposals before the Board of Health would still be among the nation's strictest governing doctors and marijuana, said Tamar Todd, staff attorney for the New York-based Drug Policy Alliance, which advocates for lighter drug punishments.

At least five other marijuana states and Washington, D.C., require "bona fide" doctor-patient relationships.

Some states, such as California, require only that recommendations come from physicians. Others go further than Colorado's suggested rules. Alaska requires doctors to consider other treatments; New Jersey and Washington, D.C., require a doctor to be a patient's primary physician, with ongoing care.

Todd said his group doesn't oppose clarifying the doctor-patient relationship as long as it doesn't "make it overly burdensome or costly for patients to obtain recommendations."

Colorado pot activists fear new rules could do just that.

Cheryl Brown, a managing partner of Herbal Health Systems, which runs four clinics along the Front Range, said the drug isn't widely accepted among physicians and that banning all doctors with license conditions goes too far.

"What they should do instead of demonizing doctors is look at making this a specialized industry," Brown said. "Right now, there are too many doctors who are still afraid of recommending marijuana. The stigma is still there."

___

Online:

Draft physician rules: http://goo.gl/kLWYF

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DENVER — Colorado's dispute over which doctors can recommend medical marijuana could become more confusing this week when state health authorities consider tighter limits at the same time lawmak...
DENVER — Colorado's dispute over which doctors can recommend medical marijuana could become more confusing this week when state health authorities consider tighter limits at the same time lawmak...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeanette DeBella Bogue
pretty sure I'm going straight to hell....
02:45 PM on 03/14/2011
Our government does not want people to access the herbal medicine, they want big pharma to make synthetic pills.

US patent #6,630,507 issued to the united states department of health and human services in 2003.

Cannabinoids as antioxidants and neuroprotectants

bstract
Cannabinoids have been found to have antioxidant properties, unrelated to NMDA receptor antagonism. This new found property makes cannabinoids useful in the treatment and prophylaxis of wide variety of oxidation associated diseases, such as ischemic, age-related, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. The cannabinoids are found to have particular application as neuroprotectants, for example in limiting neurological damage following ischemic insults, such as stroke and trauma, or in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and HIV dementia. Nonpsychoactive cannabinoids, such as cannabidoil, are particularly advantageous to use because they avoid toxicity that is encountered with psychoactive cannabinoids at high doses useful in the method of the present invention. A particular disclosed class of cannabinoids useful as neuroprotective antioxidants is formula (I) wherein the R group is independently selected from the group consisting of H, CH3, and COCH3. ##STR1##
01:19 AM on 03/14/2011
"I really felt that was helping people, people who couldn't be helped by other means," Grinberg said. "I helped them get off painkillers and narcotics."
------------------------------------------------------

See?....that's the problem right there....getting people off painkillers and narcotics just cut into somebody's revenue stream...

Whether it's a manufacturer or a distributor (or both)....then somebody is losing their cut at that point....

But that can be fixed real easy-like just by spreadin' a little campaign cash around!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nikto
01:07 AM on 03/14/2011
The biggest lovers of Big Government are people who insist that cannabis be illegal.

Losers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nikto
01:05 AM on 03/14/2011
If we legalize cannabis, all those Amurkan politicians and Law Enforcement Chiefs won't keep getting their secret payment$ from the Mexi-Cartels who desperately want to keep it
illegal and expensive.

This is the real story all over the West, and probably beyond, and you better start believin' it.
01:14 AM on 03/14/2011
+1
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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01:34 AM on 03/14/2011
Fortunately, Americans are waking up and will smash the corrupt machine next year at the polls.

The marijuana-prohibition-industrial-complex is gasping its last, fetid breaths.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Mikeeee
conservatism = "low-effort" thinking.
01:05 AM on 03/14/2011
MJ laws are proof that god is not perfect. He made a mistake creating MJ, so we've corrected that flaw by outlawing it.
05:09 PM on 03/15/2011
So Gods own creations are correcting him. Delusional!
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atlantishp
Toxic Bio Person....
12:15 AM on 03/14/2011
Grinberg.... great name for a pot prescribing doc. 8 ^ )
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cat-Lover
Cats=Independence
10:12 PM on 03/13/2011
I think anyone who chooses to run for public office falls into a category whereby marijauna should be prescribed to ease their self-agrandizing, egotistical personal image issues.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Acebass
Progressive Liberal any questions?
10:11 PM on 03/13/2011
This plant has been found to shrink cancer tumors. Why is it a schedule 1 narcotic?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Acebass
Progressive Liberal any questions?
10:10 PM on 03/13/2011
Can you believe this? A doctor can prescribe any compound of man made chemical and no one says anything but let them give you mother nature and they want to get silly with it. Thats the best way I could describe it. When are the grown ups going to take over?
10:02 PM on 03/13/2011
Sure, why would we ever want to leave medical decisions to doctors?
09:58 PM on 03/13/2011
Legalizing at Fed-level means less decapitations in Mexico. Just sayin'.
02:11 AM on 03/14/2011
Proud to be your first Fan & Fav.
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camanokat
Outta this world
03:32 AM on 03/14/2011
Second!
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cjohnathan
I speak only in hyperbolic statements...
09:19 PM on 03/13/2011
It's cool here in CA now- the cops don't trip on personal possession, they generally let you go -and often with your weed...card or no card....
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cjohnathan
I speak only in hyperbolic statements...
09:21 PM on 03/13/2011
...and oh yeah- the sky hasn't fallen yet...
09:14 PM on 03/13/2011
I dont think Colorado is overstepping by trying to tighten things up. Remember many towns in the state voted out the dispensary model. The citizens are obviously concerned. Democracy in action.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
qaan
Everything in moderation, including moderation.
08:37 PM on 03/13/2011
More regulatory bodies equals bigger government. Giving people the freedom to use pot means less control by the government. Tax the stuff and essentially it becomes a sin tax for potheads. It will help unclog our court systems but people who own and run prisons will lose money.

Less government, more freedom. Sounds like a great political position for the Tebaggers to adopt! Wouldn't that just make everyone's brains explode?
01:21 AM on 03/14/2011
Big government and more regulation works fabulously though when it is the case that you want to use it to put your smaller competitors out of business.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Danyelle79
08:34 PM on 03/13/2011
Party Poopers :-}