Pubdate: Thu, 06 Sep 2018 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2018 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Karen Berkowitz MEDICAL MARIJUANA SELLERS SEE NEW LAW AS A WIN FOR OPIOID-DEPENDENT PATIENTS: 'WE ARE THRILLED' Medical pot sellers in the north suburbs are lauding a new Illinois law that will eventually allow patients who might be prescribed an opioid-based painkiller to qualify for medical marijuana as an alternative. The Opioid Alternative Pilot Program has the potential to expand marijuana access to patients who have been, or could be prescribed medications such as Oxycontin, Percocet or Vicodin, even if they don't have one of the medical conditions the state otherwise requires for eligibility. Gov. Bruce Rauner signed the law on Aug. 28. Local dispensary operators see the law as a major breakthrough in the Illinois medical marijuana program, which has been growing slowly but steadily since sales began in late 2015. Unlike some other states that allow medical use of marijuana, Illinois does not include chronic pain or intractable pain on its list of qualifying conditions. "This is a major step in tackling the state's opioid epidemic," said Ben Kovler, founder and chairman of Green Thumb Industries, which operates The Clinic Mundelein among its marijuana businesses in multiple states. According to the Illinois Department of Public Health, the state saw 1,946 opioid overdose deaths in 2016. Of drug overdose deaths in 2016, about 80 percent involved opioids, according to the department. Prescription opioid overdose deaths in Illinois quadrupled from 344 in 2013 to 1,233 in 2016. "Now those suffering from pain can opt for medical marijuana, which has zero deaths related to overdose," Kovler said. "We are thrilled the people of Illinois will now have that choice." The Illinois Department of Public Health says it will take some time before patients can obtain medical marijuana as an opioid alternative because the state needs to update its computer tracking system. The new law requires the state health department and other involved agencies to adopt emergency administrative rules by Dec. 1. The law is expected to immediately speed up the registration process for patients with a qualifying medical condition. Patients and caregivers no longer need to submit fingerprints or consent to a criminal background check as part of their application to the Illinois Department of Public Health. "If you have a felony, you could still get opioids, but you were not eligible for cannabis, which doesn't seem to make sense," said Andy Hunt, who owns Elevele in Highland Park with his wife Veronica. "The background check for cannabis has been removed. We are very grateful for that." Once the system is up and running, patients who've been certified by a physician and have proof they've paid the state's registration fee will be able to visit a dispensary and obtain medical marijuana while the state reviews their application. The dispensary also can assist patients in filing the form. Dispensary operators report that patients have waited 60 days and longer for their applications to be approved. "The big difference is that there is going to be immediate access, as opposed to a three-to four-month bureaucratic wait that patients have been experiencing since the inception of the program," said Joseph Friedman of PDI Medical, a dispensary located in Buffalo Grove. "If you are in pain and have a condition where medical cannabis can be helpful, waiting three to four months is not a good thing." Hunt said patients reaching out in a time of great need have been forced to wait simply because the state is short-staffed. He said the decentralized registration system will put more responsibility on the dispensaries to make sure patient documents are legitimate. It also poses some inherent challenges for the state that the updated tracking system is intended to address. "The main concern for the state is, How do we track patient usage? How do we make sure patients aren't using more than one dispensary on the same day?," he said. "How do we track all these new people in the system and (verify them) if the state is not the sole access point? Right now, you wait for state approval and you are in." Still, Hunt and others believe the state's approval of medical marijuana as an opioid alternative is a significant boost for businesses and patients. He notes that doctors have long lobbied for medical marijuana as a way to wean patients off of opioids and slowly reduce the amount of the narcotic. "We are excited about the opportunities to help more patients in the state of Illinois deal with their issues in a much safer and more effective way," said Mitchell Kahn, chief executive officer of Greenhouse Group and a Deerfield resident. "We are excited to bring our medicine to more and more patients and, frankly, to introduce our dispensaries to more patients." The firm's four Illinois dispensaries include a Deerfield location south of Lake Cook Road that won the state's license for Northfield and New Trier townships. Patients using medical marijuana as an alternative to opioids will get a 90-day registration card that can be renewed for 90-day periods with their doctor's approval. "Say you just had an accident and broke an arm and need something for pain," Friedman said. "Cannabis is going to be another tool in the tool chest for physicians to treat that pain. It doesn't preclude a patient from getting a narcotic. It is just an additional tool." The state health department reported Sept. 5 that 25,928 patients had purchased about $12 million in dry flower, concentrates and infused products from the state's 55 licensed dispensaries during the month of August, up from nearly $11 million in June. The most prevalent medical conditions for which patients sought medical marijuana, as of mid 2017, were severe fibromyalgia, cancer, post-traumatic stress disorder and spinal cord disease. Post-traumatic stress disorder was added as a qualifying condition in 2016. "As a pharmacist, I am seeing a lot more benefits from medical cannabis than I am seeing from a lot of the western medications that people use to treat their symptoms and diseases," Friedman said. Friedman's PDI Medical and Hunt's Elevele are jointly sponsoring a Lake County CannaEXPO Sunday, Sept. 9 that will include a session on medical marijuana as an alternative to prescription opioids. The event is free and will take place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 175 East Hawthorn Parkway in Vernon Hills. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt