This informal CPD article, ‘Legislative Changes to Allow the Prescribing of Cannabinoids’, was provided by Andrea Last, Director and Clinical Lead at Jenner Medical Consultancy, formed by three healthcare professionals looking for a new challenge, with combined experience in the NHS, private practice, pharmacy, hospital, travel clinics and Cannabis Clinics who want the name to not only be synonymous with training and embedding protocol but also as a go to for assistance and support.
Introduction
This article is an introduction into the changes surrounding the possession of cannabis. Much has changed in the last five years, changes a person not working in the field of medicine will be aware of. On the 26th July 2018, the Home secretary announced, following a recommendation from The Chief Medical Officer, and an ACMD review, that cannabis derived medicinal products would be rescheduled. Following this, in the autumn of the same year, the law changed to allow the prescribing of cannabis-based products.
Medical Cannabis and the Law
Due to a lack of knowledgeable staff in GP practices and wider NHS, patients prescribed cannabinoids often join an online forum where they can gain personal recommendations of strains proven to successfully treat a condition they may have, and read reviews of, sometimes costly vapes before purchasing. This is having both positive and negative consequences, positive is the patient feedback in an area of medicine that is still very much in its infancy, and a forum gives patients the room to be open without fear of prejudice or bigotry. The negative, unfortunately, is that clinic error, discrepancies in product quality and reactions of unknowledgeable individuals, including the police are shared and debated. A perusal of these forums will demonstrate the vastly different experiences these patients have when dealing with the police.
A Mayor of London Assembly document titled ‘Possession of Cannabis’ was last amended in January 2022 and gives no reference to cannabis possession via a prescription.1 It states the action to be taken are:
- A warning to be given.
- A fixed penalty to be issued.
- Subject charged to proceed to court.
It goes on to state, “Once all paperwork and systems are updated the drugs will be disposed of through approved methods”.
While we can sympathise with patients’ frustrations, we also must acknowledge the police are doing what they have been trained to carry out. An update is very overdue.
Cannabis users can be split into two groups:
- Recreational users
- Medicinal users
There are, of course, further elements, an example being people that are using cannabis medicinally now who have had prior experience of it recreationally. In amongst this cluster will be people with “previous” (people already known to local police for being found to be in possession at some stage in the past), some of these may initially come across as antagonistic as they recall past experiences.
There are a small number of patients who are completely new to cannabis, finding themselves at a more mature age with a debilitating condition for which previous prescribed medication has not proved successful. These people will need a sensitive approach. In my experience, patients that are cannabis naive will venture slowly, starting with CBD oil, then maybe moving onto THC, possibly a cartridge to begin with. It would be some time before they would be confident enough to handle flower, having found a form of treatment that works, they may be battling with years of conditioning regarding the illicit use of cannabis. At this point, a negative encounter with the law would have a very detrimental effect and may result in them sacrificing their health and wellbeing.