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Pennsylvania Gives Approval To First Medical Pot Dispensary

David Goldman
/
AP

Pennsylvania officials on Thursday announced the first all-clear for a medical marijuana dispensary in the state to begin providing the drug once it becomes available from a licensed grower.

The Keystone Canna Remedies dispensary in Bethlehem received the state authorization, a major milestone in Pennsylvania's new medical marijuana program .

"It means there's going to be safe and effective access to a new medicine that can help (patients) in a wide variety of ways," said Victor Guadagnino, the company's co-founder and chief of business development. "We really do look at medical marijuana as a new platform to reintegrate the patient back into their own health care."

Nine entities to grow and process medical marijuana previously have been approved, and their products are expected to be available to patients in the coming four months.

Gov. Tom Wolf said the approval is good news for patients and their caregivers.

"We are one step closer to providing medical marijuana to patients with serious medical conditions who desperately need this medication," the Democratic governor said.

Guadagnino, who lives in New York City, said the dispensary on Stefko Boulevard in Bethlehem will open this month for educational workshops and registration assistance, but he does not expect to have the product available until mid-February.

The Bethlehem dispensary will start with four or five employees and grow based on patient demand. The company also plans to eventually open two other dispensaries in the Lehigh Valley area.

Acting Health Secretary Dr. Rachel Levine said officials expect more dispensaries to open in the coming weeks.

A 2016 state law legalized medical marijuana for people suffering from one of 17 qualifying conditions, including AIDS, autism, cancer, epilepsy, post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic pain and Crohn's disease.

More than 10,000 people have signed up, and among them, about 1,200 patients already have been certified by physicians to use medical marijuana. About 570 doctors are being trained or have completed training to be allowed to certify patients.

The law permits pills, oils, vapor or liquid marijuana, but not marijuana in plant form or what are considered edibles.