Justices, in a 5-2 decision, said a proposal by the political committee Sensible Florida included ballot wording that would mislead voters. Credit: Photo via Adobe
A Florida House panel unanimously signed off on a proposal that would allow doctors to renew patientsโ€™ medical-marijuana approvals using telehealth.

Bill sponsor Spencer Roach, R-North Fort Myers, told the House Healthcare Regulation Subcommittee that the bill (HB 387) would โ€œtreat this (medical marijuana) like any other medicine.โ€

More than 2,500 doctors have undergone training that allows them to order medical marijuana for patients.

Voters approved a 2016 constitutional amendment that broadly authorized medical marijuana, and nearly 800,000 patients have been certified for the treatment.

Under current law, doctors must conduct a physical examination of a patient โ€œwhile physically present in the same room as the patientโ€ before ordering marijuana.

Gov. Ron DeSantis temporarily suspended the face-to-face requirement because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but only for patients who were renewing medical-marijuana certifications with the same doctors they had seen previously.

The executive order expired in mid-2021, but some practitioners are frustrated about doctors who continue to use telehealth for recertifications and even initial visits.

Barry Gordon, a Venice-based physician who specializes in medical-marijuana care, told the House panel that using telehealth for recertifications would benefit some of the sickest Floridians.

โ€œItโ€™s a cost-savings for patients, itโ€™s safe for patients, and itโ€™s critical,โ€ Gordon said. โ€œYou have to remember that our patients are sometimes the most debilitated and weakest of the patients here in Florida.โ€

The measure also would allow the Department of Health to suspend a physician from being able to order medical marijuana for up to two years if he or she โ€œprovides, advertises or markets telehealth services prior to July 1, 2023.โ€

Currently, the state agency must direct complaints about medical-marijuana doctors to its Division of Medical Quality Assurance, which Roach said โ€œis a long process.โ€

The change โ€œwould add a necessary and immediate tool to help the department when physicians break the rules,โ€ he added.

Sen. Jason Brodeur, R-Sanford, has filed a similar bill for consideration during the 60-day legislative session that began Tuesday. Facebook Twitter Email PrintCopy article link Save