I watched the same documentary and some of your statements and conclusions are invalid.
He does (and has) turned down those whose medical records he is unable to verify.
He was asking one guy for the name of his Orthopedic Dr. and obviously the guy didn’t have one nor presumably any other Dr. treating him. If he had one, its doubtful he wouldnt know his name, isnt it? He didn’t get the certification for good reason. It’s not that difficult for experienced Docs to spot the fakes.
This Dr said that he also does a regular physical exam (which is standard for a normal professional) for which (obviously) the cameras were not permitted.
It’s not quite as simplistic as you’re making it sound. Standards do vary from one state to another, but in my state there is a clearly delineated set of criteria for patients to qualify for MM as their is in all states who permit its use for medical reasons.
If you’re interested, just go to Michigan.gov and do a search on Medical MJ qualifiers. You can do the same for any other states which permit it also. I recently was researching this for myself and I read through all the info. quite thoroughly.
If someone is just certifying (or recommending, whatever the case may be) everyone who walks in the door, this will become obvious in time and I’m sure the ever-watchful gov. will have a set of consequences ready and waiting for Drs. who are abusing their privilege.
With other controlled substances ( most likely painkillers like Oxy Contin) a physician does not have to be “dispensing” drugs in order to potentially face criminal prosecution and hefty jail time.
I’ve seen enough cases in the news where an MD who was basically selling Oxy prescriptions for 50–150 (or more) bucks a pop every few mins. or so had the law finally catch up with him.
And it usually did involve doing things the old-fashioned way like his office being staked out and patient counts per hour being diligently tracked and documented as well as undercovers going in to get their prescriptions. No physical exam, no check on previous medical records, etc etc. The few shysters and money-grabbing bad apples in the bunch are eventually convicted and sent to prison.
Just irresponsibly writing the prescriptions was enough to do it. I imagine the same standards apply to writing recommendations for MM and possibly more so.
MM is one class higher in restriction than really heavy duty painkillers like Morphine, Dilaudid, OxyContin and the like.
That seems pretty bass-ackwards to me, since there have been countless deaths directly linked to Opiate abuse and none to MJ, (afaik), but that’s our marvelous Government wisdom for ya.
Anyhow, the majority of MDs are responsible professionals who maintain reasonable standards of care and practice.
And, if you ever do manage to graduate from Med school and pass License Board exams and end up running a prescription mill just for the bucks, I think you’ll stick out like a sore thumb and get the penalties deserved. (Speaking hypothetically, of course.)
:)