Pubdate: Thu, 23 Jun 2016
Source: New Haven Register (CT)
Copyright: 2016 New Haven Register
Contact:  http://www.nhregister.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/292
Author: Jack Kramer, ctnewsjunkie.com This story has been modified 
from its original version. See the original at ctnewsjunkie.com.

MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROGRAM TOUTED AS A SUCCESS

The number of patients in the state of Connecticut receiving medical 
marijuana treatment has grown from 2,000 a few years ago to 11,000, 
according to Department of Consumer Protection Deputy Commissioner 
Michelle Seagull.

Connecticut legalized medical marijuana for adults in 2012. There are 
nine dispensaries in the state serving the more than 11,000 
registered patients.

Seagull reported those numbers at a recent seminar entitled 
"Navigating Connecticut's Medical Marijuana Regulations," which was 
given at the Connecticut Bar Association's Annual Legal Conference.

Seagull told the lawyers' association that the state's 4-year-old 
medical marijuana legislation is a "model" that other states have 
tried to mirror.

She said Connecticut's law "enables truly sick patients to get help 
from palliative marijuana. But, there are lots of requirements, rules 
of the road that need to be abided by," Seagull said, before 
marijuana can be prescribed for patients.

"We treat this for what it is intended to be," she said, "as medicine 
for diseases such as cancer or Muscular Dystrophy.

"You can't have marijuana prescribed," Seagull said, "for things like 
anxiety or pain."

In the past legislative session, a bill that would give children 
under the age of 18 access to nonsmokeable medical marijuana became law.

The new law gives minors with severe epilepsy and terminal illnesses 
access to marijuana after the approval of two doctors.

April Arrasate, founder and chief operating officer of Curaleaf, one 
of four licensed producers of medical cannabis in the state of 
Connecticut, said Connecticut's medical marijuana requirements are 
the "toughest in the nation."

Arrasate, founder and chair of the Connecticut Bar Association's 
Medical Marijuana Committee, added: "There is so much misinformation 
out there about medical marijuana."

The best way to combat the misinformation, Arrasate told the lawyers' 
group, "is to simply relay facts, including that physicians do not 
prescribe marijuana in the same way other medications are prescribed 
to patients."

Rather, she said, physicians may certify, that a particular patient 
has been diagnosed with a disease that makes the patient eligible for 
the palliative use of marijuana and, based on a medically reasonable 
assessment of the patient's medical history and medical condition, 
the potential benefits to the patient from the palliative use of 
marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks.

Additionally, Arrasate added, the maximum allowable monthly amount is 
2.5 ounces unless a physician indicates a lesser amount is appropriate.

Arrasate that she always keeps her mother in mind when she speaks 
about medical marijuana.

"I lost my mother to breast cancer five years ago," said Arrasate. 
She went to describe her mother as "cannabis naive," but she 
(Arrasate) knows that her mother would have benefitted from medical 
marijuana treatment, if she was alive today.
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