Iowa medical marijuana board to consider PTSD, Alzheimer's as treatable conditions
GazetteOct 31, 2019
The board will meet on Friday to vote on petitions that would allow people with post-traumatic stress disorder, opioid use disorder, Alzheimer's disease, and intellectual disability with aggression and/or self-injury to use medical cannabidiol to treat their conditions.
If the board approves the petitions, they will move to the
If the medical board approves a petition, an effective date will be set so patients can have their condition certified for medical marijuana use.
The meeting is open to the public and will take place at the Iowa Laboratory Facility in
The petitions for PTSD, opioid use disorder and Alzheimer's disease were put to the board my MedPharm Iowa, one of two companies approved to produce and sell medical marijuana in
"It's not going to work for every single patient, but in this compassionate care program, there's no reason it would not be one of the approved conditions," Nelson said.
In a statement earlier this month,
"Any Iowan with PTSD should not be denied access to effective treatments, especially those that are safe alternatives to risky opioids," the statement read.
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The Medical Cannabidiol Board, which will meet for the last time this year on Friday, also will review its 2019 Annual Report Recommendations that will be sent to the
Among several recommendations, the board may ask state lawmakers to remove the 3 percent THC cap on products and replace it with a purchase limit of 4.5 grams of THC over 90 days.
THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, is the psychoactive component of cannabis.
Under
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"Ultimately, I believe
The purchase limit would not apply to the terminally ill. The limit could also be increased by the certifying health care provider without board approval.
But despite those exceptions,
Any patient who needs more than 200mg of THC a day for a condition will no longer have access to the dosage they need under a purchasing limit, he said. That means they would have to reduce their dosage or run out of their medical marijuana before the 90 days are up, Nelson said.
Nelson also pushed back on those in support of a purchase limit who say this could mitigate the risk of people using these products for recreational purposes. That doesn't happen in
"People are using this for medical benefit, and that's it," Nelson said.
A full agenda of the Iowa Medical Cannabidiol Board meeting on Friday can be found at idph.iowa.gov/omc/Medical-Cannabidiol-Board.
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