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NJ Lawmakers OK Telehealth for Medical Marijuana Prescriptions

The vote allows care providers to prescribe medical marijuana via telehealth for certain patients, and follows the state's action last month to waive the in-person requirement during the pandemic.

Telehealth strategies

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By Eric Wicklund

- New Jersey lawmakers have passed legislation allowing care providers to use telehealth to prescribe medical marijuana.

S619, approved last week by the full Assembly, allows providers to prescribe medical marijuana via connected health channels to certain patients who face barriers to accessing in-person care, including children residents of long-term care facilities and patients who are developmentally disabled, housebound, terminally ill or in hospice care. Other patients would first need an in-person consult before moving to a telemedicine platform.

“Many medicinal marijuana patients suffer from conditions that limit mobility, making frequent visits to the doctor’s office a significant barrier to the medicine they need,” the bill’s sponsors, State Assembly Members Pamela Lampitt, Joann Downey, said in a press release following the vote. These patients “are some of our most vulnerable patients and are typically the ones whose access to medical marijuana is restricted by the requirement to renew their prescription in-person at their doctor’s office.”

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