Anonymous wrote:The dispensary I went to said that I should get a medical marijuana card for my mom with bone cancer. The recreational use products might not be strong enough for her pain.
Her oncologist encouraged us to do this but can’t get us a card.
Any recommendations for a provider to help get the card?
Anonymous wrote:You can do online appointments with Veriheal or nuggmd. You’ll pay a fee to do a zoom with a dr who should go over your mom’s issues and then immediately submit the paperwork to the Maryland cannabis control who will issue you a certificate good for one year.
I would ask the provider if it should be in your name or your mom’s name so that you can be the one to pick it up for her. (They may not allow this and you may have to take her with you to the dispensary so she can show her if and certificate. The dispensary dart can keep her cert on file and access it each time, but I’d is also needed each time.) However, if you have a government or sensitive job I would not get it in your name.
Anonymous wrote:Try the recreational products. For a lot of adults 5-10 mg in an edible is plenty. If not, take another 5mg after waiting 2 hrs. Patient should have eaten something with fat recently for optimum absorption. If buying something like a chocolate bar, always look at the total dose on the package. Many packages contain 100 mg. If you consumed that in a go, it would be a really bad time.
Vaping or smoking delivers THC faster and in a way where it’s a bit easier to titrate to the right dose. When consuming this way, 20 percent THC is plenty high, and a lot of recreational products exceed this. Avoid products marketed as wax or shatter, as they are very high potency.
High doses often don’t feel pleasant, especially for those who don’t have a pre-illness consumption habit. They can cause a drop in blood pressure, which increases heart rate and makes some people feel anxious. Some people also react negatively to the feeling of being high. The more intense and longer-lasting it is, the more out-of-control they feel. In rare cases, high doses cause psychosis and vomiting. In adults, consumption is usually self limiting before it reaches such side effects.
Often, dispensaries have a list of referring physicians. I think cannabis-focused websites, like Weedmaps, also have such lists.