The Ohio State Medical Board announced on Wednesday that it will continue its review of three additional conditions to determine if they will qualify for medical marijuana.
Conditions include Irritable Bowel Syndrome, OCD, and ASD.
From February 9th until February 24th, the board will be accepting comments from the general public on those terms.
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Professionals will evaluate the three criteria to decide whether or not they should be added to the list of prerequisites. Board members and others “with experience with medical marijuana programs in other states” will make up the group of experts.
The following medical conditions are currently on the approved list for medical marijuana use:
- AIDS
- The disease of the nerve cells called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
- Dementia associated with Alzheimer’s
- Arthritis
- Cachexia
- Cancer
- Migraines that occur regularly and persistently
- Brain damage caused by repeated trauma
- Syndrome of Pain in a Complex Area
- The disease of the bowel known as Crohn’s
- Caused by epilepsy or another seizure disorder
- Fibromyalgia
- Glaucoma
- Chronic Hepatitis C
- The disease Huntington’s
- Chronic intestinal inflammation
- It’s called multiple sclerosis.
- Continuous, extreme, or unrelenting pain
- Insights into Parkinson’s Disease
- Having an HIV-positive status
- PTS, or post-traumatic stress disorder
- Anemia with sickle cells
- Spasticity
- Paralysis or numbness in the legs or feet caused by spinal cord damage
- Incurable disease
- Tourette’s disorder
- Brain damage from trauma
- Colitis ulcerative
Lorain, Ohio is home to the state’s first drive-through medical marijuana dispensary. The Citizen by Klutch, the dispensary, even does its own growing in nearby Akron. The dispensary’s primary objective is to facilitate quick and uncomplicated patient access.