Dr. Bob
Well-Known Member
Always glad to meet a fan, especially one that can quote a 2 year old article based on the annual report of the program in 2010, even though you misquoted it.Dr. Bob,
I see you're saying this is an overall win for the patients, but I'm failing to see how. I believe I read one of your posts regarding only 55 physicians in the state perscribing medical marihuana. What happens to the patient who's primary physician isn't one of those 55 physicians who feel comfortable making that recommendation? What do you suggest for them!?
Back in April of 2011, they published the stats of the program (they didn't though required by law in 2012). At that time, 55 docs were responsible for 70% of the certs, and only 1 in 15 doctors in Michigan (some 2000) had ever written even one certification. It was part of a write up I did calling for the participation of primary care doctors in the program in order to put certification physicians such as myself out of business. It was published in the Lansing State Journal in July, 2011.
SINCE that time, we've had standards put in place by the medical board, which resulted in many physicians contacting me to help them set up protocols for their own certifications. Not all, but enough to show there was real interest and they were glad the board came out with guidelines, so they decided to give it a try. BUT the overall issue is lack of education in the medical field about what marijuana can and can't do. The ones that came to clinics with me were amazed that patients with clear chronic pain were able to come off dosages of narcotics that were on the border of their comfort levels (very high). Decreases in the flairs of crohns, post surgical patients, etc. They had no idea.
I then published my call to action in 2012. Every patient recruit 1 patient a month to get certified. Wean off narcotics, when your doctor asks why you don't need them, TELL him. He'll hear it enough and it will sink in. Show him success stories. Most importantly, solve his 'problem'. Doctors do not like chronic pain patients on narcotics. They pawn them off to 'pain doctors' because they are uncomfortable giving narcotics. If cannabis makes it so you don't need narcs, you have solved a problem for him. Do it.
Certification clinics had a reputation of signing anyone with money, records or even a face to face with a doc not required. Doctors in regular medicine had little respect for these bad apples and those that promoted them... These bills get rid of them, and the legitimacy of the field will go up as the good ones will continue to work along, doing the right thing. Just like 'regular' doctors.
Hope that helps.
Dr. Bob