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Supporters of medical marijuana stress that, unlike physicians prescribing pharmaceutical drugs, pot doctors are not enabling people to use a potentially fatal substance. But they acknowledge that some doctors abuse their authority to extend pot-using privileges. "We have standards to uphold. I really try to uphold those standards," said Dr. Jean Talleyrand, founder of MediCann Inc., the state's largest chain of medical marijuana evaluation clinics. "There are a lot of doctors who are not upholding those standards." Clinics typically charge $50 to $150 per visit for new patients. Seeing 10 patients a day, pot doctors can earn hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Some battle it out for customers with ads in alternative newsweeklies offering discounts for older patients and two-for-one specials. Still, many pot doctors maintain low profiles. They work at one or more of 140-plus clinics that opened in the last few years, only a handful of which identify their physicians in marketing materials. Some of the largest clinics, including Talleyrand's, declined requests from the AP to give their staff doctors' names. Even as the number of these doctors has soared into the hundreds, the risk of getting in trouble for improper recommendations is low. The state medical board and the companion panel that polices osteopaths have restricted the licenses of 13 pot doctors, about one per year, since the landmark law's passage. Two had their licenses revoked, the most serious discipline available. Disciplinary action is rare because the state board lacks the staff and launches investigations when complaints are brought, said Julie D'Angelo Fellmeth, a University of California, San Diego law professor who spent two years as the board's independent enforcement monitor. The people they rely upon to submit those complaints are patients. They "are not going to be filing the complaints," she said. "They are happy as clams." Another reason the doctors may avoid scrutiny is because investigators focus on areas of medicine that are viewed as a greater threat to public safety
-- incompetent surgeons or physicians who over-prescribe painkillers on which patients can overdose, Thornton said. Current medical board officials declined to be interviewed for this article, but said in answers to written questions that the agency gives medical marijuana practitioners the same scrutiny as other doctors, even though it has inadequate staff to closely monitor them. Under California law, physicians who prescribe controlled substances such as painkillers must report all such prescriptions to a central state database each week. Marijuana does not fall under this requirement because as a Schedule 1 controlled substance under federal law
-- a drug the federal government says has no medical value -- it cannot legally be prescribed, only recommended. To avoid state scrutiny, doctors need to only follow a few simple rules
-- review patients' prior medical records for proof of the existing ailment, perform "good faith" physicals, develop treatment plans, and talk to them about the risks and potential side effects of using pot. But dispensary owners, patients and practitioners say even those guidelines are routinely ignored, or at least pushed to the limits. In Los Angeles, the situation got so out-of-control this year that the city's pot shops stopped selling to about 30,000 customers with paperwork from 10 doctors at three clinics. Two closed, almost overnight. The third changed its telephone number and location after being swarmed by angry customers demanding refunds. Michael Backes, director of the Cornerstone Collective, said he put together and circulated a list of doctors to other pot shops after noticing people trying to join the co-op with suspicious-looking physicians' approvals. "We started to notice a lot of recommendations that weren't even signed by physicians anymore," he said. "They were rubber-stamped, literally rubber-stamped."
[Associated
Press;
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