Opioid Alternative Pilot Program
Launches
Registration now open
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[February 02, 2019]
Individuals looking to register for the Opioid Alternative Pilot
Program (OAPP) can now do so on-line through the Illinois Cannabis
Tracking System at https://etk.icts.illinois.gov. The OAPP, which is
part of the Medical Cannabis Pilot Program (MCPP), was created
through the Alternative to Opioids Act of 2018. The OAPP allows
access to medical cannabis for individuals who have or could receive
a prescription for opioids as certified by a physician licensed in
Illinois.
The Opioid Alternative Pilot Program was designed to provide people
with an option to manage their pain. Opioids can be highly addictive
in a very short period of time and this program offers qualifying
individuals an alternative.
The first step is for individuals to see their physician. The
patient’s physician must complete a certification using the Illinois
Cannabis Tracking System. After the physician certification,
patients will create a user account to register online, at a
licensed medical cannabis dispensary, or at a local health
department that offers assistance. Along with the physician
certification, a passport-like photo, copy of driver’s license/state
ID, proof of Illinois address, and $10 payment are required. Once
all the required information is uploaded into the system and the
payment is submitted, the individual will receive an electronic
medical cannabis registry card.
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The registered patient must present the eRegistry card at the dispensary they
selected to purchase medical cannabis as soon as the same day. The OAPP
registration is valid for 90 days. If the physician agrees the patient should
continue to use medical cannabis, a new registration can be submitted for
another 90 day period.
At this time, the OAPP and MCPP are two separate registration systems. An
individual cannot be enrolled in both programs at the same time. Should an
individual who is registered in the OAPP want to apply to the traditional MCPP,
their OAPP registration will be cancelled at the time they submit an application
to MCPP. Beginning February 1, 2019, individuals who apply for the traditional
MCPP will receive provisional access to dispensaries for a period of not more
than 90 days while IDPH reviews their application.
Individuals who applied to the MCPP on-line between December 1, 2018, and
January 31, 2019, will receive notification about their provisional access to a
dispensary provided they applied with an email. If they did not provide an
email, they can obtain more information about how to update their application
information via the IDPH website.
More information about the OAPP and the MCPP can be found www.dph. illinois.gov
website.
[Illinois Department of Public
Health] |