Peace all!
Well, my two cents now that we have a nice bit of input on the thread here.
And I'll only address Maryland where I live.
I think I am seeing two distinct questions that our original thread statement gets broken into now:
1. How do I get medical cannabis certification in Maryland?
2. How can I get that certification from my Primary Care doctor in particular?
I don't think the two will co-exist most of the time.
Follow
@Baron23 's route and work to find out what doctors are already registered, then hope to find a nearby doctor. Maybe, just MAYBE, yours will make it on to the list. Probably not. And then there are insurance issues of course.
But the core problem will continue to exist in Maryland for many years - a filthy rich "respectable" Medical Mafia already exists here. We have both Howard and Montgomery counties here. And the record is, quite plainly, the record here in Maryland.
The "Compassionate Care Act" was signed in 2004, would take 10 years to go into effect so that cannabis could be taught in teaching hospitals - med school plus the length of residency. Dispensaries, prescribers, etc. would all then go online Jan 2014. (Please note today's date...)
Johns Hopkins and Univ of MD both refused outright. They based it on the never-ending cyclical b.s. used to cover up "We're haters and just don't want to do it" - that their Schools of Pharmacology already HAD cannabis, and it was listed as a Schedule I drug, so anyone certifying it could (not would) immediately lose their license. The respective Schools of Pharmacology in particular could lose research grants, federal funding, etc.
Then, Sheppard Pratt Mental Health System actually hired LOBBYISTS to keep "Anxiety" off the final list of covered conditions, thereby assuring "...cannabis would therefore not need to be included in clinical practices...". They succeeded.
IMO - it will be compassionate medical professionals and doctors - as that earlier post's list showed, from many specialties - who will step forward as individual practices.
But don't look to existing Primary Care doctors imo, not in large percentages. It will probably end up okayed by *some* pain mgmt here (as an aside, one of my old pain mgmt doctors won't do it, but asked me to contact him next year after the dispensaries are open, and come talk to him about how I am doing on cannabis then - since there is no risk to him he is interested in talking about it then!).
So what to do? My suggestion at this point is to *separate the issue of certifying doctor and primary care doctor*, perhaps seeing a specialty clinic when it opens as just that - a specialty clinic. (Of course, all of this is predicated on your health insurance situation - I have traditional Medicare *specifically* so that I do not need a referral to anything - physical therapy, etc. unless a doctor's prescription is required. Of course this is of the 20% of specialists who take traditional Medicare here in Maryland when I am lucky, of course). Heck, look at it like acupuncture or something many insurance companies don't cover anyway that you might never mention to your Primary Care doctor unless it became relevant. (Just trying to make the door to peace nice and wide here...)
I think it will take a few years for "regular" doctors to stop being afraid in Maryland, and until then we will have to make due.
Personally, I *may* choose to remain as I am until middle of next year - uncertified, glad only for the decriminalization. If I need to obtain, I pay $300/oz for dispensary-grade, $335 for tops only. Those are right around the projected prices here.
But my hope *will* always be to have an understanding "traditional" Primary Care doctor - one who realizes that pot-smoking Michael Phelps and his trillion gold medals kinda' makes cannabis hating from a medical perspective null and void...
Peace everyone!