Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jun 2017 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2017 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Authors: Jonathan Zaid and Cam Battley INSURE MEDICAL CANNABIS Approximately 200,000 Canadians have a medical marijuana prescription, but it isn't covered by most health insurance plans. (File) Since the implementation of Canada's national medical cannabis system in 2001, attitudes toward cannabis have changed significantly. What was once stigmatized as a street drug has come to be understood as a substance with broad therapeutic uses. Today about 200,000 Canadians have a prescription to use medical cannabis under a doctor's care for management of symptoms caused by chronic pain, bowel diseases, spasticity associated with multiple sclerosis, certain mental health disorders and a host of illnesses. Patients use cannabis because it works for them with manageable side effects. But there's a problem. Medical cannabis is not covered by most health insurance plans. Treating cannabis the same as other prescription medications from an insurance perspective is a matter of pragmatism and basic fairness. The purpose of health insurance is to ensure people have access to and can afford medical therapies they need to be healthy and productive and to help manage costs if people are disabled by injury or illness. This latter situation has put a potentially precedent-setting court case in the spotlight. In August 2010, Wayne Skinner of Halifax suffered a work-related injury that left him permanently impaired, dealing with chronic pain and depression. He was initially prescribed multiple medicines, including opioid drugs, to manage pain. These were all covered by his health insurance, administered by the board of trustees of the Canadian Elevator Industry Welfare Trust Fund. But the drug regimen only partially controlled Mr. Skinner's pain, while causing significant, disabling side effects and putting him at risk of opioid dependence. Mr. Skinner and his doctor discussed cannabis as a potential alternative. He received a prescription, and became a Health Canada registered medical cannabis patient. The cannabis was effective. His pain was relieved, his depression lifted, he was able to function again and side effects were minimal. But the board of trustees of the Canadian Elevator Industry Welfare Trust Fund denied coverage of medical cannabis. Mr. Skinner took his case to the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission. A tribunal decided in Mr. Skinner's favour, finding the board had discriminated in disallowing reimbursement for medical cannabis. It ordered them to cover the cost of Mr. Skinner's medicine. The board is appealing to the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal. The case will be heard Oct. 2. The unfairness of this situation is clear. Mr. Skinner and his doctor tried first-line treatments, without success and with crippling side effects. They tried another prescription medicine, cannabis, which worked and was well tolerated. The former drugs were covered, the latter was not. Opioids included in the original treatment come with significant risks, including addiction and death. Cannabis has a much lower risk of dependence and has no known level of lethal overdose. The insured drugs cost over double the expense of cannabis. Denial of coverage for medical cannabis has caused Mr. Skinner and his family extreme hardship and has significantly diminished his health. Mr. Skinner's case illustrates the urgent need to take a rational approach to medical cannabis for insurance purposes. For many patients, cannabis works when other medicines do not. It is prescribed by a doctor. It is produced according to rigorous regulation by companies licensed by Health Canada. It's time to treat patients fairly, recognize the medical legitimacy of prescribed cannabis, and add it to lists of covered drugs. The Nova Scotia Human Rights Tribunal says it's a human right. Let's hope the Court of Appeal decides it's a legal right. - -------------------------------------------------------------- Jonathan Zaid is executive director of Canadians for Fair Access to Medical Marijuana (CFAMM), and Cam Battley is executive vice president of Aurora Cannabis Inc., a licensed producer. CFAMM and Aurora are supporting Wayne Skinner's case at the Court of Appeal. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt