Canada - New Medical Marijuana Regulations Should Allow Pharmacist Dispensing

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
from 420 Magazine...

Health Minister Jane Philpott has a golden opportunity later this month to improve access and safety for medical marijuana patients and Canadian pharmacists hope she will take it. By amending the Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations (MMPR) to allow pharmacists to dispense medical marijuana, Canadians would have a safe, reliable and convenient alternative to mail-order service, in compliance with the Federal Court’s access requirements set out in Allard v. Canada.

A pharmacy-based distribution system would immediately provide another option for Canadians to access medical marijuana, alongside the existing system of licensed producers who provide their product to patients through the mail. CPhA’s proposed changes to the MMPR would authorize pharmacists to obtain medical marijuana from a licensed producer and dispense it to an individual with a medical document.

Pharmacists have the necessary expertise to mitigate the potential risks associated with medical marijuana, including harmful drug interactions, contraindications, and potential addictive behaviour. A simple regulatory amendment would empower Canadian patients to access the product in urban, rural and remote locations across Canada, under the supervision of a licensed health care professional, through an established distribution system proven to protect patient and public safety.

Medical and recreational marijuana are fundamentally different products, intended for use in very different ways. When Canada makes recreational marijuana legal next year, it will be critical to have a safe and secure distribution system for medical marijuana already in place. By amending the regulations immediately, a sophisticated pharmacy distribution system equipped to handle narcotics and controlled substances will help limit the emergence of a grey market and protect the medical system against abuse by recreational users. This is an important lesson learned from US states where medical and recreational marijuana streams coexist; a fact which has been recognized by the federal government’s Task Force on Marihuana Legalization and Regulation, and public health experts like the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse.

In Israel and Germany, regulators have already recognized the benefits of pharmacist involvement in the management and distribution of medical marijuana. Canadian licensed producers have demonstrated their capacity to supply pharmacy directly, with Canada’s largest producer announcing recently that it will export medical marijuana for sale to patients in German pharmacies – Canadian patients should have the access to the same pharmacist education and oversight.

Canadians are strongly in favour of pharmacist dispensing of medical marijuana, and an independent assessment by KPMG confirms it is in the best interest of patient access and safety. The federal government has a limited window to bring Canada’s medical marijuana in line with international best practices – the Canadian Pharmacists Association urges the Health Minister to seize this opportunity.

 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
Pharmacists have the necessary expertise to mitigate the potential risks associated with medical marijuana, including harmful drug interactions, contraindications, and potential addictive behaviour.
Do tell. What particular specialized training on cannabis use did pharmacists receive to give them the 'expertise'? I think my nearly 4 decades of cannabis use gives me more knowledge of it's effects than what some pill pusher is ever going to possess. Perhaps they can list all the potential 'harmful drug interactions' that pose such danger to the cannabis user so we can all be informed. I self-medicated with alcohol for years...I never once had a pharmacist on hand to warn me of the dangers.
 

kDude

Well-Known Member
gotta think the budtender at the local dispensary is much more highly qualified than some pharmacist.
heck any random stoner likely is more qualified.

i guess they must hate that.. we don't need to pay them for some BS schooling like every other career.. all us peons are the ones ahead already with more experience/expertise than any of their upper-class snotty nosed book memorizers will ever hope to have.
*guess that's why they'll try to put up so many stipulations and stumbling blocks to try to stop us peons, and help the upperclass get the take-over they so desire.
 

Medipuffs

Well-Known Member
they may know how cannabis will interact with the other medications you are prescribed but for the sole purpose of distributing cannabis they will not have the background to prescribe properly just like doctors have no idea in most instances, even doctors schilling cannabis, how the different strains will affect patients. Trial and error is usually the advice given.

Its akin to them capping THC levels etc... why don't you just prescribe the right strain once at the start and be done with it? because its not in your qualifications but your ego/god complex will not allow you to realize you are not the expert in the relationship as far as an understanding and functional use of cannabis is concerned.

the don't know c from b except that they are both part of the alphabet and classed similarly as consonants
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
Medical and recreational marijuana are fundamentally different products, intended for use in very different ways. When Canada makes recreational marijuana legal next year, it will be critical to have a safe and secure distribution system for medical marijuana already in place. By amending the regulations immediately, a sophisticated pharmacy distribution system equipped to handle narcotics and controlled substances will help limit the emergence of a grey market and protect the medical system against abuse by recreational users.

Isn't the point of legalization to not associate it with narcotics and other controlled substances? the greay and black markets already exist.... I heard that medical marijuana only grows in orange pots and recreational marijuana grows only in blue....thoughts?...lol...
 

CannaReview

Well-Known Member
from 420 Magazine...


Pharmacists have the necessary expertise to mitigate the potential risks associated with medical marijuana, including harmful drug interactions, contraindications, and potential addictive behaviour. A simple regulatory amendment would empower Canadian patients to access the product in urban, rural and remote locations across Canada, under the supervision of a licensed health care professional, through an established distribution system proven to protect patient and public safety.
Can't someone get the info on where pharmacists are taught about Cannabis?

Health Minister Jane Philpott
Let me guess someone he knows, owns or runs pharmacies...
 
Top