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After application to the Florida Medical Marijuana Use Registry, you may apply for your medical marijuana card from the State of Florida. This card allows you to visit any dispensary within the State to purchase medical cannabis, in the dosage and route that your marijuana doctor recommended for you. Medical marijuana cards in the State of Florida are valid for 1 year. Your physician’s medical marijuana recommendation is valid for a maximum of 210 days, or 7 months.
With a medical cannabis card, you are legally protected if you are stopped and found in possession of marijuana. If you have been found having purchased marijuana from a state-licensed medical marijuana treatment center (dispensary) and have your registry identification card, you should be able to avoid any negative legal consequences.
Florida patients who have received their Florida medical cannabis card may purchase at any state-licensed dispensary. Regardless if your card was issued by medical marijuana doctors in Miami Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Jacksonville, Tampa, Orlando, or anywhere within the State of Florida, as a Florida resident you would qualify to purchase medical marijuana.
In 2014, Florida joined twenty-one other states in legalizing medical marijuana with the signing of the Compassionate Medical Cannabis Act of 2014. This allowed low-THC medical cannabis products to be recommended to those suffering from cancer, chronic seizures, epilepsy, or muscle spasms, so long as that recommendation came from a licensed medical marijuana doctor. Then, in 2016, voters in the State of Florida approved the Florida Medical Marijuana Legalization Initiative (Amendment 2), legalizing the use of full strength marijuana for qualifying medical conditions, with the requirement that a licensed medical marijuana doctor approve the patient. Since then, more changes to the law have been made. Having a medical marijuana evaluation done by marijuana doctors throughout the state will allow you to obtain a medical marijuana card, satisfying Florida state law and protecting you from potential legal consequences.
Simply put, the state defines medical marijuana or medical cannabis as products which are purchased at a licensed dispensary (or medical marijuana treatment center) by a qualified patient with a medical marijuana card. Acquiring marijuana from a source other than a state recognized dispensary will mean that your cannabis is not considered ‘medical marijuana’ and therefore subject to your city’s laws towards possession and is a crime under Florida law.
Speaking with our Florida medical marijuana doctors, you will discuss your particular situation and need, but there are two general requirements for any patient to be given a medical marijuana recommendation and obtain a card from the State:
1. You must be either a permanent or temporary resident within the State of Florida to both receive and maintain your MMJ card from the state. This card is utilized at medical marijuana dispensaries throughout the state, and will only work in Florida dispensaries. Cards issued in other states may not apply, nor may a card issued in Florida apply in other states.
2. You must be diagnosed with a qualifying medical condition by a certified doctor. Beyond the enumerated list below, the law allows a terminal condition diagnosed by a physician, or other debilitating conditions of like, kind, or class such as depression, anxiety, and migraines.
• Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s Disease – Nervous system disease that weakens muscles and impacts physical function
• Cancer – Disease caused by an uncontrolled division of abnormal cells in a given part of the body
• Epilepsy or Seizures – A transient occurrence of signs and/or symptoms due to abnormal excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain
• Crohn’s Disease – A chronic inflammatory bowel disease that affects the lining of the digestive tract
• Glaucoma – Eye conditions marked by increased intraocular pressure that can cause blindness
• HIV/AIDS – Human immunodeficiency virus that overtime causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
• Multiple Sclerosis (MS) – A disease in which the immune system eats away at the protective covering of the nerves
• Parkinson’s Disease – A disorder of the central nervous system that affects movement, often including tremors
• Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) – A disorder in which a person has difficulty recovering after experiences or witnessing a terrifying event.
• Chronic Muscle Spasms – Sudden, involuntary movement in one or more muscles
• Chronic Nonmalignant Pain – Pain unrelated to cancer that persists beyond the usual course of disease or injury
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