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This article is shared with LebTown by content partner Spotlight PA.

By Ed Mahon of Spotlight PA

HARRISBURG โ€” During a recent budget hearing, a Republican lawmaker questioned how the Department of Health uses data to provide oversight of doctors in Pennsylvaniaโ€™s medical marijuana program, citing ongoing public records disputes involving the agency.

The stateโ€™s Office of Open Records has ordered the health department to release the number of approvals by specific doctors if such records exist. But the agency has sued to keep those records secret, arguing for a broader interpretation of the medical marijuana lawโ€™s confidentiality rules.

At least three cases that center on the issue are currently pending in Commonwealth Court. Spotlight PA is a defendant in two of them.

State Sen. Greg Rothman (R., Cumberland) referred to those cases as he questioned Debra Bogen, the stateโ€™s acting health secretary. He didnโ€™t ask Bogen to comment on releasing the data.

โ€œBut I would like to know if your department does do reviews of this information,โ€ Rothman said. โ€œAnd does the department protect against doctors from providing blanket approvals for medical marijuana use?โ€

Bogen didnโ€™t directly say how the agency uses the data or clarify whether it routinely reviews the information for patterns or outliers. Instead, she said the department responds to complaints against doctors, and doctors have to attest that theyโ€™re following requirements of the law in order to certify patients.

โ€œLooking at the numbers of certifications done by a specific provider is challenging because there are health care providers that, by the nature of their work, would certify more patients than others,โ€ Bogen testified. โ€œAnd just looking at the numbers alone doesnโ€™t really give us that information.โ€

Rothmanโ€™s questions follow a series of Spotlight PA investigative stories that uncovered serious flaws in the medical marijuana program, including questionable health claims, weak oversight of cannabis companies, and unfair rules for doctors.

Publicly available records obtained by Spotlight PA show the department has cited patient approval numbers in at least one disciplinary case against a doctor. In another disciplinary case against a doctor, an attorney for the health agency argued that โ€œthe total number of patients versus his time and ability to certify patients is relevant.โ€

In response to questions from Spotlight PA, health department spokesperson Mark Oโ€™Neill said it reviews approval data in limited situations, and it โ€œhas only used the information as part of enforcement actions that resulted from a patient complaint or compliance investigation.โ€

Oโ€™Neill also defended not releasing approval data publicly, saying that unless courts rule differently, the agency โ€œwill continue to interpret the law in the manner most protective of patient and practitioner information consistent with its ongoing commitment to privacy rights and confidentiality.โ€

As of late March, there were more than 425,000 active certifications for medical marijuana patients, and there were more than 1,800 approved practitioners in the program โ€” a relatively small percentage of the tens of thousands of licensed doctors in the state. In order for doctors to participate in the program, they must register with the state and complete a four-hour training w.

Some medical professionals, including medical marijuana supporters, argue the health agency should audit doctor records to ensure compliance and not rely solely on patient complaints to initiate investigations.

In February, an editorial from TribLIVE urged the health department to release approval data. It argued that the information could provide important context for medical marijuana approvals and help reveal โ€œif the process is deliberative or if just paying for certification is an all-access pass beyond the programโ€™s velvet rope.โ€

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