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ABC News
08-07-2025
- Health
- ABC News
AHPRA takes action against more than 50 practitioners in medicinal cannabis crackdown
The health-practitioner watchdog has put medicinal cannabis prescribers on notice, saying poor prescribing practices and surging consumer demand are leading to "significant" patient harm. AHPRA today released new guidelines urging prescribers to put patient wellbeing above profits, as medicinal cannabis prescriptions rise rapidly due to telehealth companies providing a one-stop shop for quick access to medicinal cannabis. The regulator said some businesses were using "aggressive and sometimes misleading advertising that targets vulnerable people" and online questionnaires that coached patients to say "the right thing" to justify prescribing. The ABC can reveal AHPRA has now taken action against 57 medical practitioners, pharmacists and nurses over medicinal cannabis prescribing practices. "We're currently investigating a further 60 right now as we speak. And for those that choose not to meet our requirements, we will be knocking on their door in the near future," AHPRA chief executive Justin Untersteiner said. The crackdown comes after a series of ABC investigations revealed patients with a history of psychosis had been hospitalised after being prescribed medicinal cannabis and one patient had died following inappropriate prescribing. The investigations also revealed concerns from doctors who said they were being treated like drug dealers and pressured to write medicinal cannabis scripts by the telehealth companies. While AHPRA said the majority of practitioners do the right thing, the agency uncovered half a dozen who issued more than 10,000 scripts in a six-month period, including one who issued over 17,000, or one every four minutes in a working day. Mr Untersteiner said the regulator held serious concerns for patient safety due to excessive and inappropriate prescribing. "We've seen patients present to emergency departments with medicinal-cannabis-induced psychosis, and this can particularly happen where there are patients that have pre-existing mental health conditions or substance abuse or other issues like that. "Another area that worries us is … prescribing excessive quantities or even prescribing multiple different prescriptions to a single patient so they can try which one suits them. "Again, that's completely inappropriate," he said. The new AHPRA guidelines explicitly state that except for childhood epilepsy, muscle spasms and pain associated with multiple sclerosis, cancer and chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, "there is little evidence to support the use of medicinal cannabis". According to Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) data, the main conditions medicinal cannabis is being prescribed for include insomnia, chronic pain and anxiety. The guidelines state medicinal cannabis should not be prescribed as a first-line treatment and should only be used when there is an evidence-supported clinical indication and when other treatments have not worked. They also insist patients be thoroughly assessed, proper medical records be taken, and an exit strategy is developed to help patients stop taking the medication. Most medicinal cannabis products prescribed in Australia are unapproved, meaning they have not been assessed by the TGA for safety, quality, performance or effectiveness, something patients must now be informed of during consultations. The majority of cannabis products prescribed in Australia also contain THC, which causes psychoactive effects and makes them Schedule 8 medicines due to the risks of misuse, abuse and potentially addictive properties. "We don't prescribe opioids to every patient who asks for them and medicinal cannabis is no different. Patient demand is no indicator of clinical need," Medical Board of Australia Chair, Dr Susan O'Dwyer said. AHPRA and the Medical and Nursing and Midwifery Boards said they were working with other regulators like the TGA and may investigate practitioners with high rates of prescribing even without receiving complaints. Patients and doctors are encouraged to report unsafe practices to help protect others by calling the AHPRA Notifications Hotline on 1300 361 041.

ABC News
18-05-2025
- Health
- ABC News
Medicinal cannabis prescribing practices under scrutiny after scripts issued 'every 4 minutes'
Australian medical practitioners are writing scripts for high-strength medicinal cannabis products with alarming speed, raising concerns some are putting "profit over patient safety", according to the regulator. Since medicinal cannabis was legalised in 2016, the industry has exploded, with cannabis telehealth clinics fuelling a rapid increase in prescriptions of products that contain THC, the psychoactive substance that causes a "high". More Australians are accessing medicinal cannabis in smokable flower form with THC content of between 20 to 98 per cent, for conditions such as insomnia, chronic pain and anxiety. That is despite what some experts describe as "surprisingly weak" clinical trial evidence that high-strength THC products are the most suitable treatments for those conditions. New data from the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) revealed eight medical practitioners appeared to have issued more than 10,000 scripts each for the highest THC-strength products over a six-month period. The agency said one doctor appeared to have issued more than 17,000 scripts in six months, equivalent to a script every 4 minutes in a working day. Using multiple data sources, AHPRA's analysis also identified one pharmacist who dispensed 959,000 cannabis products in one year, which equates to more than 2,600 products per day — for 365 straight days. The data also revealed a nurse practitioner who appears to have issued 31,000 scripts over a year. AHPRA's Executive Director, Regulatory Operations, Kym Ayscough said the findings amounted to evidence some prescribers were dealing in volumes where it was "very difficult to understand how they could be meeting their professional obligations". "It does seem unusual to see those very high volumes of prescriptions and dispensing from a small number of practitioners," Ms Ayscough said. The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) collates figures related to medicinal cannabis applications and approvals from doctors but the figures don't reflect the number of individual patients who ultimately received scripts. AHPRA combined data from the TGA with dispensing data from state and territory poisons regulators to find treatment was initiated for 441,000 new patients for the strongest category five cannabis products between July and December 2024. High-strength THC products are of particular concern to regulators because they are schedule eight medications like opioids and have greater risks for abuse and harm. AHPRA says the high volumes are being fuelled by a rise in telehealth prescriptions — in some cases, provided after only a brief consultation with either a doctor or a nurse. An increasing number of clinics operate a one-stop-shop model that pays the doctors who write the scripts — before selling and shipping the prescription cannabis products to patients. The system presents an obvious conflict of interest for doctors who are required to act in the best interest of patients. "It is very clear in the codes of conduct for registered practitioners that patient safety is to be their number one concern." A 7.30 investigation found multiple medicinal cannabis clinics advertise free phone-only consultations and some patients are prescribed high-strength THC-containing cannabis by doctors they've never spoken to after brief phone consultations with a nurse. Claire Noonan, a GP from Orange in NSW, was looking for more flexible work when she decided to sign up to be a medicinal cannabis prescriber with a telehealth company in late 2022. There were red flags from the moment she got her contract. She wrote to the company saying she was concerned that pay was contingent on writing scripts. "I didn't think it was conducive to ethical medical practice," Dr Noonan explained. She negotiated for the contract to be changed and started doing telehealth consultations with patients around the country. Her prescribing mantra was to start low and go slow, usually starting patients with cannabidiol or CBD, a cannabis compound that doesn't cause a high. "Some patients expressed a strong preference for THC preparations and would try and convince me to prescribe those for them, which, yeah, I didn't want to do on a first visit," Dr Noonan said, adding that some patients also "seemed to have a careful script" for how to try and get certain medications. She said on one occasion, after she declined a patient request for a THC prescription, she received a call from the telehealth company asking her to reconsider because the patient had complained. "We had to have a discussion about how I wasn't prepared to prescribe against my own clinical judgement. Dr Noonan quit soon after. She doesn't want to name the company, which didn't respond to requests for comment from 7.30. She said the CEO of the company wasn't a doctor and couldn't be blamed for wanting to run a profitable business. While Dr Noonan said she sees a place for medicinal cannabis in health treatment, she's concerned other doctors, especially young graduates and those without specialist GP training, might be more easily pressured to make poor prescribing decisions. While AHPRA regulates individual medical practitioners and the TGA regulates the advertising of medicinal cannabis, these businesses are operating in a regulatory grey area. While medicinal cannabis is legal, most products are still categorised as "unapproved medicines" which means they aren't on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods nor are they monitored for safety, quality or efficacy by the TGA. That means it's entirely up to doctors to ensure the drugs are prescribed appropriately. Former police officer Rohan Dawson was looking for relief from flashbacks, nightmares and anxiety caused by PTSD after years with the force. Cannabis was a treatment he'd never considered until the keen gardener saw an advertisement for "free cannabinoid therapy consultations" at his local hydroponic gardening shop. "[I] had a 10 or 15-minute phone consult with a lady who wasn't a doctor, and all of a sudden there was dope heading to my door. So it's really as simple as that." Within days, he was shipped a vape and a tub of dried cannabis flower marketed as "slurricane" containing 27 per cent THC. He never spoke to the doctor whose name appeared on his script and had no idea how strong the product was. He stopped taking it when his mental health deteriorated and he went to see his regular GP. "The advice was that THC stuff and your medication are not good bedfellows at all," he said. Despite never having another appointment, he continued to be billed under a subscription model and more cannabis arrived at his door. "I was alarmed by how efficient it is. Like, I thought, 'Shit these companies, they know how to roll this stuff out'. You can't criticise them for not being organised," he said. "I don't know why they would be wanting to have this, you know, Chernobyl-strength stuff sent out to people … it's most probably not necessary unless you're on death's door." The company he used is called Dispensed, and it advertises free consultations through bong shops, tobacconists, and hydroponic stores with appointments booked through iPad kiosks. Store owners told 7.30 they are paid a percentage commission when patients sign up. It's illegal to advertise medicinal cannabis and the TGA has handed out more than 190 infringement notices totalling over $2.5 million in fines since 2020. But many companies use coded language — like "alternative" or "natural" healthcare and plant-based imagery to ensure patients know what they provide. The TGA said it's "aware of, and concerned about, the rise of unlawful advertising of therapeutic goods … including through touch-screen kiosks". Last year, the founding pharmacist of telehealth provider Dispensed, and two of its prescribing doctors, were banned from supplying or prescribing medicinal cannabis after two patients with mental health conditions were supplied medicinal cannabis. One was hospitalised in a psychosis and the other took his own life. In a new statement to 7.30, Dispensed said the action was taken against the practitioners directly and the company "reviewed its systems, including to provide additional support to health practitioners and improve the quality of patient care". Dispensed added that the onus was on doctors and that it "expects practitioners to comply with their legal and professional obligations" and that when deciding whether to prescribe to patients they should consider "the type of medication that may be appropriate (including the strength)". Professor Iain McGregor from the Lambert Initiative at the University of Sydney has been studying the potential for cannabinoid compounds to be used to treat health conditions for more than a decade. He was an early supporter of legalising medicinal cannabis. "Even the initial advocates, the people that urged action back in 2015/2016, are now somewhat perplexed that it's turned into a bit of a commercial monster with the bar set too low for patient access and … some unethical prescribing going on," he said. He points out medicinal cannabis can be a very effective treatment backed by good evidence, especially for patients with epilepsy, chemotherapy side effects and in palliative care, but the research hasn't caught up with the "very large number of conditions where medicinal cannabis is being applied where we don't have high-quality evidence." Do you know more about this story? You can securely contact eliseworthington@ "That's not to say that the evidence won't emerge and there are clinical trials going on all the time, and we're running quite a few of them," he said. It's important to remember medicinal cannabis is generally well tolerated and the vast majority of those using it as prescribed won't see negative side effects, Professor McGregor said. However, he said he was concerned some of the THC products on the market were more than double the strength of home-grown cannabis. "The concern is that within the literature on cannabis, we know that higher THC products appear to be more linked to mental health, adverse outcomes, precipitation of severe anxiety and, paranoia in vulnerable individuals, perhaps schizophrenia and manic attacks." Another factor driving an increasing uptake in medicinal cannabis is that prescription products are now in many cases cheaper than buying illegal cannabis through a drug dealer. That's something Professor McGregor believes isn't necessarily a bad thing from a harm-reduction perspective. "There's the quality control. It means they have to talk to a doctor before they access the product, and it means that they have security of their products over time. "The downside is maybe that doctors don't necessarily want to be servicing the non-medical market. "I think they maybe didn't study medicine to become, you know, a glorified cannabis dealer," he said. Watch 7.30, Mondays to Thursdays, 7:30pm on ABC iview and ABC TV