Pubdate: Thu, 02 May 2013
Source: Tucson Weekly (AZ)
Copyright: 2013 Tucson Weekly
Contact:  http://www.tucsonweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/462
Author: J. M. Smith

THE NUMBERS GAME

With 17 Dispensaries Cleared to Open and 37,422 Patients, Mr. Smith 
Looks at the State of MMJ in AZ

When the MMJ program launched in Arizona, there was a lot of cock 
blocking and stalling and excuses from the governor's office and 
other chambers of government across the state. It took more than two 
years to get a dispensary, and so far just 17 have been cleared to open.

But viewed from where I sit (the patient chair), the MMJ program 
seems to be operating pretty smoothly. I haven't heard much from 
anyone about major problems, and it seems the state is holding up its 
end of the bargain now. The governor has seen the error of her ways, 
or at least sees the error of defying the judges who repeatedly tell 
Attorney Generalissimo Tom Horne to STFU and get out of the way.

The problem now might lie with us.

Some dispensary operators expected a surge in patient applications 
when dispensaries opened, and it doesn't appear to be happening. As 
of April 13, the state had 37,422 patients. That's about 11,000 more 
than a year earlier, but it's only 1,100 more than we had in January, 
when dispensaries started popping up. Colorado had something in the 
neighborhood of 100,000 patients in its first year of medical cannabis.

Since the entire dispensary system relies on patients with cold, hard 
cash, this could be a troublesome trend if it continues. Here's a 
closer look at the current numbers:

Dispensaries

As of April 26, the state had cleared dispensaries to open in Fort 
Mojave, Page, Williams, Sedona, Globe, Quartzite, Wickenburg, 
Glendale (2), Phoenix, Eloy, Tucson (4), Willcox and Bisbee. The 
Department of Health Services doesn't report which dispensaries are 
open, so it's unclear how many we have. Twelve others had asked for 
authorization to open. Ninety-eight have registered and are in 
various stages of completion. This all seems pretty slow to me, given 
that they had two years to prepare while Gov. Jan stalled. I suspect 
many of the operators hesitated to make major investments until they 
were sure we were actually going to have an MMJ program.

Patients

Young patients continue to dominate the statistics, with the 18-30 
age group comprising 27 percent of patients, according to the latest 
patient report from the state Department of Health Services. About 20 
percent each are in the 31-40, 41-50 and 51-60 age groups. There are 
114 patients (0.3 percent) age 81 or older and 39 younger than 18 
(0.1 percent).

Chronic pain still accounts for the lion's share of patients, at 72 
percent, but it's a smaller share than it was last year, when it was 
88 percent. I'm not sure what that means, but I like it. Chronic pain 
has always been cited by critics as a sham catch-all that lets 
stoners get cannabis cards. We can only hope the trend means more 
patients with other illnesses are seeing the benefits of cannabis and 
coming over to our side. ;)

No other illness contributes more than 2 percent of patients. Just 11 
patients (0.03 percent) qualified with Alzheimer's disease and 12 
(0.03 percent) with sclerosis.

In the end

Ultimately I'm a little worried about the number of patients and 
their potential shunning of dispensaries. If Arizonans choose not to 
get cannabis cards and we don't shop at dispensaries, the system will struggle.

Dispensaries need customers, and so far it looks like they are having 
a hard time finding them. I've said before that we could all probably 
survive without dispensaries, getting our meds the way we always 
have-from our friends. But I think we should support them, as long as 
they're here. We should consider them friends who need our support 
and encouragement as they surge ahead into this murky area of 
cannabis commerce. Yes, you can save a few bucks getting meds from a caregiver.

But what are a few bucks between friends?
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom