wondering if I'd even qualify...

HippySmoke

Active Member
Since I was a young man I have had chronic nausea and apetite issues I've seen a few doctors about it maybe 3 or 4 times over 10 years but do to a lack of health insurance my medical history is spotty can I possibly qualify?
 
Since I was a young man I have had chronic nausea and apetite issues I've seen a few doctors about it maybe 3 or 4 times over 10 years but do to a lack of health insurance my medical history is spotty can I possibly qualify?
Not a question for us call these guys --> http://www.thc-foundation.org/

I can say though you have to be able to defend your condition in court so solid medical records are good to have no matter what.
 

mrgreenlungz

Active Member
Since I was a young man I have had chronic nausea and apetite issues I've seen a few doctors about it maybe 3 or 4 times over 10 years but do to a lack of health insurance my medical history is spotty can I possibly qualify?
Let me save you some time. What THCF and most clinics have adopted as a standard of qualifying patient status is quite simple. They will tell you that you need 3 sets of chart notes from an MD or DO or xray transcriptions (not the film on a disc). They have to be dated from within the past 3years. You can try to find a free or income based clinic. As long as your chart notes are from an MD or DO.

Some new rules have been set in place releasing some of the insane restrictions on who can write the recommendation. ARNP's can now do it as well, but if going to a clinic, that is the paperwork they want. You have to remember, these people have alot to lose freedom, money and licenses that took many years to acquire. Even of a Dr is in another country during a raid, their name still shows up in 1,000 places and we all know what the police will tell the paper. The headline the next day would read:

Pot clinic shutdown Dr John Doe facing federal charges. Kind of hard to bounce back from that after your professional life takes that kind of a hit.
 
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