Ohio considers opioid addiction, other conditions for med. marijuana treatment
Ohio is considering to add opioid use disorder, or opioid addiction, among other qualifying conditions for medical marijuana treatment.

Ohio is considering to add opioid use disorder, or opioid addiction, among other qualifying conditions for medical marijuana treatment.
Petitions have been made to add autism spectrum disorder, anxiety, depression, insomnia and opioid use disorder as qualifying conditions for the state's medical marijuana program.
On Wednesday, the State Medical Board of Ohio's Medical Marijuana Expert Review Committee, a sub-group of the medical board, will review the findings from experts and they will decide which conditions they think should be added to the program.
On June 12, the full board will listen to the suggestions of the committee, and they will decide whether to accept or reject the petitions for those five conditions.