Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jun 2014 Source: Metro (Saskatoon, CN SN) Copyright: 2014 Free Daily News Group Inc. Contact: http://metronews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5420 Author: Trevor Greenway BIG CHILL OVER DOCS PRESCRIBING POT Rx marijuana. Through arrangement with private firm, Toronto doc now seeing patients via Skype for pot scripts Canadian doctors who prescribe medical marijuana are feeling a chill, as health officials apply pressure on them not to prescribe a drug they know little about. A doctor in Toronto was willing to go on the record with Metro to talk about the stigma surrounding medical pot and the benefits patients derive from the drug. But when he heard several colleagues are being scrutinized by the College of Physicians and Surgeons, he backed out. "Patients' doctors do not want to prescribe and they think that the college has said that you cannot prescribe," said the doctor, who we agreed to keep anonymous. "It's uncomfortable and there is a stigma behind it." The physician has started seeing patients via Skype - who are connected with him through a private firm for a $300 fee - as more and more patients are finding it tough to find a doctor willing to sign off on a pot prescription. He says telemedicine is sufficient for such consultations and the patients provide him and the firm government-issued identification and their medical records. He said the problem is the fact there is no scientific data for doctors to reference when considering prescribing pot to patients with multiple sclerosis, cancer and various chronic pain conditions. "Physicians receive no training," he said. Sandy Daviau spent more than a decade looking for a doctor to prescribe the drug for his multiple sclerosis. He said with the recent changes to Health Canada's medical pot program, which makes doctors the ultimate gatekeepers of the drug, more and more patients are finding it hard to access the drug. "It's worse than before," said Daviau, whose initial physician Dr. Rob Kamermans was ordered to close his Coe Hill clinic and was charged with fraud, forgery and money laundering after he signed off on 4,000 pot prescriptions in a year. It's stories like these that have doctors worried they will get nabbed for trying to help. "There is a clampdown going on right now. There is a political war going on out there behind the scenes and we are the pawns right now." The College of Physicians of Ontario told Metro the federal pot program changes provide "significant concern," as doctors are expected to prescribe a drug that has no clinical studies. The Quebec college is concerned about doctors prescribing pot as well, especially via telemedicine or Skype. They are forbidden from using telemedicine right now in Quebec. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom