Pubdate: Fri, 24 Nov 2017 Source: Ft. Worth Star-Telegram (TX) Copyright: 2017 Fort Worth Star-Telegram Contact: http://www.star-telegram.com/submit-a-letter/ Website: http://www.star-telegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/162 Author: Anna M. Tinsley MEDICAL MARIJUANA WILL BE SOLD IN TEXAS BEFORE END OF 2017 In just a few weeks, medical marijuana will legally be sold in Texas. The plants are nearly finished growing in South-Central Texas, which means workers will soon harvest and cultivate them, drying them out and preparing to extract low-level cannibidiol. Once that medicine is in a liquid form, and packaged in drops, the first sales of medical marijuana -- geared to help Texans with intractable epilepsy -- will occur before the end of this year. "It's very, very exciting," said Jose Hidalgo, chief executive officer of Cansortium Holdings, the Florida-based parent company of Cansortium Texas. "Nothing in life ever goes as planned. "But so far, this has gone as well as it could." Cansortium Texas, one of three companies licensed to grow and sell medical marijuana in Texas, is poised to be the first company to get the product on the market. Officials believe they are still on track to deliver medications directly to patients across the state starting the third or fourth week of December. The medicine -- which contains the ingredient in a marijuana plant that lets a patient get the medical benefits without the buzz -- would be personally delivered to Texans by the company in white, unmarked delivery vans that include built-in security measures. A fleet of vehicles will be used to deliver medical marijuana to customers across Texas. Drivers will travel with a nurse or social worker who can answer any questions patients have when deliveries are made, officials say. The low-level cannabidiol will be sold under a 2015 law to help Texans with intractable epilepsy if federally approved medication hasn't helped. This culminates a lengthy process that began when the Texas Legislature, led by state Rep. Stephanie Klick, R-Fort Worth, approved the Texas Compassionate Use Act to make use of cannabidiol legal for at least some of the nearly 150,000 Texans estimated to have intractable epilepsy. Lawmakers have stressed this is an extremely limited form of medical marijuana geared to let patients receive benefits without the high. This medicine does not include THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, which is the psychoactive ingredient that produces a high. Other marijuana use -- for medical or recreation -- remains illegal in Texas and more than a dozen other states. But it is legal, in one form or another, in 29 states and the District of Columbia. The first plants that will be harvested have been growing since September on a 10-acre parcel of land in Schulenburg, a small community east of San Antonio. There, plants have grown inside MCPU's, or Moducular Cultivation and Processing Units, with constant security. "They look great," Hidalgo said. "We are toward the end of the growing cycle. The plants should be harvested in the month of December." This is the product after the marijuana plants are crushed, but before the liquid is extracted. Once the product is fully available, only certain doctors -- those registered with the Compassionate Use Program -- may prescribe the product to treat intractable epilepsy. To get this medical marijuana, Texans must have a prescription and then potentially pay between $45 and $90 for the medicine. A look online at the company's Florida website cites prices for some CBD products as $45 for one 300 milligram vape cartridge or sublingual drops and $90 for a 600 milligram vape cartridge or sublingual drops. "We understand the responsibility we have," Hidalgo said. "The last thing we want to do is be too quick ... and set false expectations. These patients have been waiting for this medicine for years. It has been a long time coming. And we are almost ready." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt