TheDemocrat
Active Member
PHOENIX - For the first time, Arizona residents who think they qualify to receive medical marijuana had the chance to apply for a card Thursday.
Will Humble, Director of The Arizona Department of Health Services, said they began processing applications at 8 a.m. and by 8:30 a.m. completed the Departments first qualified patient card.
Our first applicant was a 60-year-old gentleman from Scottsdale living with Crohns disease, he said.
Humble tells ABC15 their Vital Statistics staff provided the oversight for a team of 11 temporary workers in charge of processing the applications.
He said 20 department staff members have been trained in the event they experience a backlog and need to jump in and help with processing.
Humble also said the fees they collect from patients will pay the salaries for these temporary workers.
To register as a patient costs $150, as a caregiver it is $200 and dispensary agents will pay $500.
By 3 p.m. Thursday, the department began tallying the numbers.
This is the first-ever snapshot of who applied, with a breakdown of the first data set from the department.
Number processed: 65
Number approved: 44
Number Deficient: 21
Primary reasons why applications were deemed deficient: Problems with photos, no medical condition on physician certification, problems with physician certification, ID wrong
GENDER:
Male: 53 (82%)
Female: 12 (18%)
AGES:
< 18: None
18-30: 17 (29%)
31-40: 14 (24%)
41-50: 15 (25%)
51+: 13 (22%)
CONDITIONS:
Chronic Pain: 37 Applicants (57%)
Cancer: 3 Applicants
Spasms: 2 Applicants
Nausea: 3 Applicants
HIV: 1 Applicant
Cachexia: 1 Applicant
Seizures: 1 Applicant