Pubdate: Tue, 16 Nov 2010 Source: Providence Journal, The (RI) Copyright: 2010 The Providence Journal Company Contact: http://www.projo.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/352 Author: W. Zachary Malinowski, Journal Staff Writer CENTER APPLICANT SEEKS OPINION PROVIDENCE -- The director of a proposed medical-marijuana distribution center has filed a petition with the state Health Department seeking a judgment on whether health-care practitioners can be affiliated with the operation of the drug-selling businesses. David C. Hughes, the point man behind Community Care Health and Wellness Inc., a would-be compassion center in Coventry or West Warwick, submitted the three-page petition on Sept. 27, with Dr. David Gifford, the state's health director. In part, Hughes said he wonders whether a physician, nurse practitioner or physician's assistant would face disciplinary action by the Health Department's professional licensing board for owning or working for a compassion center that sells medical marijuana. "To clarify, we are not questioning the clinical evaluation of a patient, diagnosis and ultimate recommendation for medical marijuana by a health-care practitioner during the normal course of professional practice," Hughes wrote. "We are questioning a practitioner with prescriptive privileges owning, operating, or receiving renumeration from an organization that dispenses medical marijuana to patients and derives revenue through the dispensing of a product on the recommendation of a health-care provider with prescriptive privileges." Annemarie Beardsworth, spokeswoman for the Health Department, said health officials have yet to rule on the petition. Hughes said he was hoping he would have had an answer by now. "I thought it would have been sooner, honestly," he said. "I went in initially thinking there is no way. This is a conflict." Hughes, a pharmacist, said that he would like to know in the event he is granted one of three possible licenses to open a compassion center in the state. He plans on hiring a physician to work for his center and bring aboard others to serve in an advisory capacity. In his petition, Hughes said that 15 of the initial applicants to open the state's first compassion center had licensed physicians affiliated with them. It's unclear how many of those original 15 have submitted applications for consideration a second time. On Friday, the Health Department announced that 21 applicants have submitted proposals to open compassion centers. The names of the applicants have not been released. The compassion centers will provide marijuana for the 2,156 chronically ill patients now registered in the program that has experienced rapid growth. Health officials say that about 75 patients apply for medical-marijuana cards each week. Dr. Todd E. Handel, a physiatrist who owns The Handel Center, a pain-management treatment center, is not one of them. He was among the 15 who submitted the first proposals and he had planned on distributing medical marijuana from his medical offices. Now, he has had a change of heart. He is not among the 21 applicants seeking a license. The department is expected to take several weeks to review the submissions and determine whether everything was completed correctly. Once an application is deemed complete, the Health Department will post it online for public review. The Health Department plans on making a final decision to allow up to three compassion centers to open in the spring. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D