Recommendation To Use Marijuana

To legally use marijuana in a state that approves the use of drug, an individual must diagnosed with a debilitating condition that the drug can be used for alleviating pain from the illness. This diagnosis is used in the issuance of a medical marijuana recommendation by a licensed doctor or physician.

A medical marijauna recommendation is an approval in writing from a patient’s doctor or physician. The recommendation permits the patient the use of marijuana as a mean to lessen any chronic illnesses that the patient may be suffering from, such as premenstrual syndrome, neurogenic pain and glaucoma to name a few. But the patient must be thoroughly and properly diagnosed before issuing a marijuana recommendation. Even with the studies about the medical properties of the drug, there are still the known side effects to be considered, such as eye reddening, impairing of the psychomotor coordination and the probable drug dependency. This is why the marijuana recommendation must be deemed beneficial to the progress of the patient’s health, outweighing the impending side effects that the drug may cause.

The marijuana recommendation must be given by a physician or a doctor who is licensed and has a permit to practice their profession. Even if all doctors could give a cannabis recommendation to qualifying patients, most of them wouldn’t. These practitioners worry about issuing a medical marijuana recommendation and the patients using marijuana, a drug that is notably unapproved by the Food and Drug Administration. Add to that the concerns regarding the consistency of dosage, the purity of its contents and the effectiveness of the drug in treatment.

Growing concerns are also brought about by the lack of willing doctors to issue a marijuana recommendation. The Controlled Substances Act of 1970 states the prescription of any regulated drug, in this case, marijuana, as a direct violation of federal law and would subject the doctor or physician to prosecution. Finding a willing doctor to write marijuana recommendation is getting harder by the minute. However, providing sufficient proof, such as current documents that diagnose a chronic condition of the patient. Obtaining these records is a matter of private concern and a patient should not use it to obtain a marijuana recommendation. Doctors fail to see that the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, passed by the State of Calfornia, protects them, regarding the writing of a medical marijuana recommendation. If the doctor doesnot give the patient a marijuana recommendation, the patient can get his or her medical history and ask for a second opinion from another doctor. This action is legal. What these doctors fear is that their rights and privileges could be taken from them.

The medical marijuana recommendation is seen as the doctor approves of the use of the drug as it will benefit the patient’d progress in health. With this, there are no laws broken and no unnecessary detainment will be enforce. Such is the authority of the marijuana recommendation, and it’s reason enough for patients who are suffering from chronic illnesses to visit their doctors and ask for a cannabis recommendation.

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