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Medical marijuana for PTSD legislation heads to Colorado House for debate

A point of contention during the hearing was access to minors

Marijuana trimmings are collected
John Leyba, Denver Post file
Marijuana trimmings are collected while plants are processed at a Denver warehouse in March 2014.
Alicia Wallace
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
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By Alicia Wallace, The Cannabist Staff

Colorado legislation to add PTSD as a qualifying condition for medical marijuana is headed to the full House.

Rep. Jonathan Singer, D-Longmont, who co-sponsored the bill with Sen. Irene Aguilar, D-Denver, said he anticipates “a bumpy but positive outcome” for .

In a late-night vote Wednesday that followed seven hours of testimony, the House State, Veterans, and Military Affairs committee passed the measure in an 8-1 decision. Stephen Humphrey, R-Severance, cast the lone dissenting vote.

Singer said no significant amendments were made, other than the removal of “acute stress disorders” from the language.


2017 legislation:


A point of contention during the hearing was access to minors, and whether children under the age of 18 could be recommended medical marijuana for post-traumatic stress disorder, he said.

For the PTSD-related recommendation, patients 17 and under would be required to have two doctors’ recommendations, sign-offs from the minor’s parents as well as a sign-off from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, he said. The provision remains on the bill.

“We continue to keep the changes that the Senate did put in for further guardrails for a stronger conversation between doctors and patients,” Singer said.

That “guardrail” is a requirement that the patient receive a diagnosis of PTSD from a licensed medical doctor or licensed mental health professional in the context of a “bona fide physician-patient relationship.”

“The doctor-patient relationship is so sacred,” Singer said. “I really want (people) talking to a doctor.”

Singer said SB 17 likely would be heard in the House next week.

Last month, the bill . Sen. Kent Lambert, R-Colorado Springs, cast the lone dissenting vote.

The Colorado Board of Health, which has not added any new qualifying conditions to the state’s medical marijuana law since it was implemented in 2001, . Previous legislative maneuvers have stalled.

A to the denying PTSD as a qualifying condition is .

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