Minnesota is not the first state to legalize marijuana, but it is the first to include medical research as a key requirement on its complicated and uncharted path to turning an illegal recreational drug into a treatment for illness.
Now that the pitched legislative debates over whether to legalize marijuana at all are over, there is an ambitious timetable to put the new law into practice. The Minnesota Department of Health has one year to hire an administrator, choose two in-state companies who will manufacture and dispense marijuana products at up to eight locations, and draft safety guidelines for patients who are under the influence of medical cannabis.
State officials must also gather and analyze existing research on safety and dosing, and create a registration system that allows doctors to certify that their patients have qualifying illnesses. Then patients apply to the state for access to medical marijuana.
Other states have shown that such a registration system is "doable," said Manny Munson-Regala, an assistant commissioner for the state health department. But none have taken on Minnesota's unique and somewhat controversial plan to study each and every patient to see if marijuana works and produces any harmful side effects. In short, Minnesota is designing a system from scratch that simultaneously serves and learns from marijuana recipients.
"The quid pro quo is, yes, you get access to medical cannabis, but you have to report some data," Munson-Regala said.
Minnesota has only legalized marijuana in oil and pill forms and will not allow people to smoke it or grow their own marijuana plants for consumption. It also has excluded marijuana usage by patients suffering from neuropathic pain or post-traumatic stress disorder who can receive it in other states. It will be allowed for eight specific conditions such as cancer, glaucoma and seizure disorders.
Studying how patients fare with various forms of marijuana could address difficult questions about doses and side effects that persist in all 21 states that legalized medical marijuana before Minnesota, Munson-Regala said. The goal is to find out "what works and what doesn't work, what's safe and isn't safe."
A novel system
Addressing them in a structured, science-based way while also launching a novel legalization system in one year will present challenges, though. One dilemma is whether to restrict the doses that are dispensed to patients for these conditions.