Not only are patients still anxious to involve a physician in their use of the drug — the publicity around recreational cannabis has peaked interest in using it as a treatment
GM layoffs. Alberta in crisis. This is the Liberals' plan at work3:29
Tom Blackwell
December 11, 2018
11:28 AM EST
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As Canada edged ever closer this year to making it legal for any adult to buy marijuana, Dr. Hance Clarke noticed a surprising phenomenon.
At his Toronto pain clinic, Clarke encountered more and more people eager for him to prescribe medical cannabis, though they could soon buy the drug without anyone’s approval. The trend has continued and today he estimates that 15 of every 20 of his patients seek pot as a treatment.
Logic suggests the newly legalized recreational weed business — which makes purchasing cannabis about as difficult as ordering a bestseller online — would render the rest of the market irrelevant.
But patients, doctors and industry representatives say the more cumbersome medical system – rather than melting away — is actually gaining in popularity.
And it’s happening despite caution from experts that the evidence of marijuana’s therapeutic benefits falls well short of the considerable hype.
I don’t see companies that are satisfied with being the best Canadian (medical) cannabis companies. I see companies that want to be the best global cannabis companies
“Recreational cannabis will lead to the demise of medical cannabis? It’s actually been the opposite,” said Clarke, director of pain services at Toronto General Hospital and a University of Toronto professor. “Canadians … want guidance, they want to know how to navigate this stuff.”
Not only are many patients still anxious to involve a physician in their therapeutic use of the drug, he and others say, the tidal wave of publicity around the recreational change has peaked interest in using it as a treatment.
Cannabis is seen in Aylmer Ont., Nov. 23, 2017. Louis Pin/Strathroy Age Dispatch/Postmedia Network
In apparent recognition of that interest, Shoppers Drug Mart, the country’s biggest pharmacy chain, is poised to become a major retailer of medical weed, and is already promoting it to doctors.
Industry executives acknowledge that recreational marijuana buyers — “adult-use consumers” in the sector’s jargon — are for now an exponentially bigger pool in Canada than medicinal users. But they insist they will keep making patients a priority, and say growth potential is huge in the dozens of other countries that have recently opened the door to medical use, yet still ban recreational consumption.
“I don’t see companies that are satisfied with being the best Canadian (medical) cannabis companies. I see companies that want to be the best global cannabis companies,” said Allan Rewak of the Cannabis Council of Canada. “They’re looking big, and they are going to win. We are the global leader.”
It was, of course, the medical cannabis stream that gave birth to that industry, and to the government-approved “licensed producers” (LPs) of marijuana that are now also branching out into the recreational market.
Health Canada says it will review the medical system within five years, but has no immediate plans to end it.
An Aphria worker looks out over a crop of marijuana in this undated handout image. Aphria is a Health Canada Licensed Producer of medical cannabis products. HO-Aphria/The Canadian Press
That’s a relief to Rob Frid, one of the 330,000 medical users registered with Health Canada as of this June, along with 21,000 authorized to grow a limited amount of pot for themselves or someone else.
Patients under the program must obtain a doctor’s authorization to use marijuana for medical purposes, which is then registered with a specific producer. Recreational users, by contrast, merely have to order their pot online, or buy it at bricks-and-mortar stores.
But there’s more at stake for patients than just convenience, says Frid, a spokesman for advocacy group Medicinal My Way who uses cannabis to treat symptoms of his early-onset Parkinson’s.
He also takes prescription drugs and says he wouldn’t want to add pot to the mix without medical advice.
“You get rid of the medical side … and you’re running into potentially some serious issues,” Frid said.
Still, as the medical stream continues to draw in more patients, questions remain about what exactly it is selling.
GM layoffs. Alberta in crisis. This is the Liberals' plan at work3:29
Tom Blackwell
December 11, 2018
11:28 AM EST
Filed under
Comment
More
As Canada edged ever closer this year to making it legal for any adult to buy marijuana, Dr. Hance Clarke noticed a surprising phenomenon.
At his Toronto pain clinic, Clarke encountered more and more people eager for him to prescribe medical cannabis, though they could soon buy the drug without anyone’s approval. The trend has continued and today he estimates that 15 of every 20 of his patients seek pot as a treatment.
Logic suggests the newly legalized recreational weed business — which makes purchasing cannabis about as difficult as ordering a bestseller online — would render the rest of the market irrelevant.
But patients, doctors and industry representatives say the more cumbersome medical system – rather than melting away — is actually gaining in popularity.
And it’s happening despite caution from experts that the evidence of marijuana’s therapeutic benefits falls well short of the considerable hype.
I don’t see companies that are satisfied with being the best Canadian (medical) cannabis companies. I see companies that want to be the best global cannabis companies
“Recreational cannabis will lead to the demise of medical cannabis? It’s actually been the opposite,” said Clarke, director of pain services at Toronto General Hospital and a University of Toronto professor. “Canadians … want guidance, they want to know how to navigate this stuff.”
Not only are many patients still anxious to involve a physician in their therapeutic use of the drug, he and others say, the tidal wave of publicity around the recreational change has peaked interest in using it as a treatment.
Cannabis is seen in Aylmer Ont., Nov. 23, 2017. Louis Pin/Strathroy Age Dispatch/Postmedia Network
In apparent recognition of that interest, Shoppers Drug Mart, the country’s biggest pharmacy chain, is poised to become a major retailer of medical weed, and is already promoting it to doctors.
Industry executives acknowledge that recreational marijuana buyers — “adult-use consumers” in the sector’s jargon — are for now an exponentially bigger pool in Canada than medicinal users. But they insist they will keep making patients a priority, and say growth potential is huge in the dozens of other countries that have recently opened the door to medical use, yet still ban recreational consumption.
“I don’t see companies that are satisfied with being the best Canadian (medical) cannabis companies. I see companies that want to be the best global cannabis companies,” said Allan Rewak of the Cannabis Council of Canada. “They’re looking big, and they are going to win. We are the global leader.”
It was, of course, the medical cannabis stream that gave birth to that industry, and to the government-approved “licensed producers” (LPs) of marijuana that are now also branching out into the recreational market.
Health Canada says it will review the medical system within five years, but has no immediate plans to end it.
An Aphria worker looks out over a crop of marijuana in this undated handout image. Aphria is a Health Canada Licensed Producer of medical cannabis products. HO-Aphria/The Canadian Press
That’s a relief to Rob Frid, one of the 330,000 medical users registered with Health Canada as of this June, along with 21,000 authorized to grow a limited amount of pot for themselves or someone else.
Patients under the program must obtain a doctor’s authorization to use marijuana for medical purposes, which is then registered with a specific producer. Recreational users, by contrast, merely have to order their pot online, or buy it at bricks-and-mortar stores.
But there’s more at stake for patients than just convenience, says Frid, a spokesman for advocacy group Medicinal My Way who uses cannabis to treat symptoms of his early-onset Parkinson’s.
He also takes prescription drugs and says he wouldn’t want to add pot to the mix without medical advice.
“You get rid of the medical side … and you’re running into potentially some serious issues,” Frid said.
Still, as the medical stream continues to draw in more patients, questions remain about what exactly it is selling.