Just as long as they’re not involved in medical marijuana.
Dr. Peter Pryor has been operating a medical marijuana practice in Wheat Ridge since 2014, and this is the first time in six years that he’s performed car-side appointments. According to Pryor, Colorado law prevents him and other medical marijuana doctors from conducting appointments remotely, and that’s putting his staff and patients at risk.
“We see quite a few immuno-compromised patients, whether they’re taking steroids for an autoimmune disorder, they have cancer, or they’re just elderly. These are the same people coronavirus wants to attack,” he says. “As an emergency medicine doctor, I just figure I’m going to get this. But telemedicine could protect me from getting it, protect me from spreading it if I do get it, and protect my patients from getting it.”
The Colorado Medical Practice Act, a law that regulates much of the state’s health-care industry, allows practitioners to conduct appointments through telemedicine for non-emergency medical visits, and that includes physical exams. However, physical exams for medical marijuana, which are required for medical marijuana recommendations and extensions, are specifically barred from telemedicine, according to Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment regulations.
The decision to prohibit medical marijuana exams from telemedicine was made by the Colorado Medical Board in 2015, with the board citing complicated policy pairings for medical marijuana and telemedicine, both of which come with their own sets of regulations. Legally recommending medical marijuana via telemedicine can also require regulatory untangling, because a ‘recommendation’ isn’t technically a prescription; prescribing medication comes under federal regulations; and cannabis is still a Schedule I federal drug. First visits could also require rule changes in other areas of state law, as Colorado medical marijuana requirements dictate that new medical marijuana patients document their qualifying conditions with recommending physicians, and that can entail in-person visits.
But all of these reasons haven’t stopped California, Connecticut, Maine, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island from allowing telemedicine visits for first-time MMJ patients, nor has it stopped seventeen other states (and Washington, D.C.) with medical marijuana programs from allowing follow-up appointments via telemedicine.
Meanwhile, Pryor is playing carhop doctor.
“We started seeing patients car-side last week. They call in — we won’t let them in the office anymore — and then I go out and see them. I physically see the patient and talk to them while they’re in the comfort of their own germy car,” he says. “It has taken a lot of stress out, but I believe telemedicine is a much better option. That way, patients don’t have to even leave the house.”
Pryor says he’s written the CDPHE and Governor Jared Polis as the coronavirus spreads, urging that the governor issue an executive order allowing medical marijuana doctors to use telemedicine. And he’s not alone: Cannabis Clinicians Colorado, an organization for health-care professionals interested in medical marijuana, sent a letter to the CPDHE making the same request, as well as a memo to CCC members on March 12 asking them to send their own letters to the state.
“Even though our patients use cannabis to treat often serious debilitating and disabling medical conditions and symptoms, it remains a fact that medical marijuana evaluations are non-emergency medical visits. There are currently 81,893 cannabis patients registered with CDPHE. All of them need to renew each year. Why risk exposing them and the medical professionals who care for them to COVID-19 by requiring an in-person visit for a non-emergency?” the CCC’s letter to the CDPHE reads.
According to CDPHE spokesperson Ian Dickinson, the department is aware of the request to allow medical marijuana doctors to use telemedicine, and the request is under review with the CDPHE’s legal and compliance office. However, he adds, the CDPHE believes that the move would probably need to come from the governor.
“The registry has received several requests that we suspend the in-person examination requirement for medical marijuana and permit tele-health during the COVID-19 outbreak,” Dickinson explains. “We have been working on these requests, but were advised that any change would likely have to come from an executive order, because the requirement of an ‘appropriate, personal physical examination’ is in statute.”
We received the following response from Polis’s administration regarding the issue: “The governor is focused on protecting our most vulnerable, slowing the spread of the virus and supporting all Coloradans during this time. The governor and the administration are evaluating potential next steps during this evolving situation.”
While they await a move from the governor’s office, Pryor and other health-care professionals recommend that patients continue with their appointments while taking sensible precautions to protect their immune systems. Part of that, Pryor says, is taking a pause from smoking.
“Stop using your lungs for smoking marijuana. It’s a lung injury, and that’s what most people are worried about with this COVID-19 thing,” he says. “It’s not the most important thing, but it can break down that barrier in your lungs, and that’s what we’re worried about right now.”
Update: This post was updated to include a statement from Governor Jared Polis’s administration.