Community Corner

Oradell Doctor Approved to Recommend Medical Marijuana

State grants first permit to grow marijuana.

State officials Monday released a list of more than 100 physicians, including  of Oradell, authorized to recommend medical marijuana to patients. Rosen is an urologist with Urology Special Care on Kinderkamack Road.

Also Monday the state Department of Health and Senior Services approved a permit for Montclair-based  to start growing marijuana, a move that could make the drug legally available to patients in three to four months. A second permit is needed before the facility can start selling the pot.

“The Department is committed to ensuring that medicinal marijuana is safely and securely available to patients as quickly as possible,” Health and Senior Services Commissioner Mary E. O’Dowd said in a statement.

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In the registration process, physicians with verified credentials submit the name, address and condition of the patient they are treating, which generates a secure identification number for the patient, said Department spokeswoman Donna Leusner. Patients have to get an identification card from the state and select a treatment center before a recommendation will be generated by the state for a patient to purchase the marijuana.

“New Jersey’s Medicinal Marijuana Program is based on a medical-model which requires physicians and qualified patients to have an ongoing relationship,” Dr. Arturo Brito, deputy commissioner for public health services, said in a statement. “Physicians will have to monitor patients on medicinal marijuana as part of managing their medical condition.”

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The Health Department is developing its patient registry, which will open in the next several months.

“I’m not surprised our state took so long,” said Dr. Jay Rosen, a urologist with offices in Oradell and Ridgewood, in a Northjersey.com report. “We have the most stringent medical marijuana law in the nation. But we need to get this to our patients. Medical marijuana is a great advancement for the treatment of patients with malignancies or in terrible pain.” 

First opened in October 2010, the physician registry will continue to accept new enrollment online athttps://njmmp.nj.gov/njmmp.  Doctors were informed their names would be made public so patients can contact them. In Bergen County, 26 physicians were listed, including Oradell's Rosen.

“Physicians must have a bona fide and ongoing relationship with qualified patients they are recommending for the program,” said a Health Department news release.

New Jersey’s medical marijuana law was signed more than two years ago by then-Governor Jon Corzine. Advocates have criticized delays in implementing the program and releasing the list of doctors.

In March 2011, the state announced six treatment centers had been licensed, but later said they were not actually approved, according to NJ.com. The Star-Ledger also published a series exposing apparent mismanagement in the medical marijuana program.

Medical marijuana has been said to ease symptoms associated with debilitating medical conditions including cancer, multiple sclerosis, AIDS and muscular dystrophy. 

The list of Bergen County physicians is attached to this article.

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