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House passes limited medical-cannabis policy; companion cultivation bill fails

Utah House of Representatives · February 9, 2018
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

On Feb. 9 the House approved a third substitute for HB195 to allow physician-recommended, standardized cannabis-based medicines for terminally ill patients; a companion bill (HB197) to authorize in-state cultivation for research and Right-to-Try failed on a close vote.

The Utah House on Feb. 9 passed a third substitute of House Bill 195, authorizing tightly controlled access to cannabis-based medicines for patients a physician reasonably believes are terminally ill. Representative Doff, who moved the substitute under the name of Representative Dawe, said the change narrows the definition of "terminally ill" and restricts recommendations to physicians only. "It tightens up the definition of what 'terminally ill' means and, also, allows only physicians to do the recommending," Doff said on the floor.

The bill limits the forms that may be dispensed to non-smokeable, medicinal formulations — pills, gels, transdermals or oils —…

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