Canadaâs largest pharmacy chain and the provider of a blockchain program for tracking medical pot believe their partnership will act as a model for such U.S. drug stores as CVS Health Corp. and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.
Shoppers Drug Mart, a unit of Loblaw Cos. with about 1,300 pharmacies across Canada, is partnering with TruTrace Technologies Inc. on a pilot program that will use blockchain to identify, track and verify the source and genetics of cannabis used by medical patients. The goal is to make it more like traditional medicine in order to reassure physicians and patients that pot is a safe treatment, said Ken Weisbrod, Shoppersâ vice-president of pharmacy business development and initiatives.
âThis is the future for medical cannabis in the world,â Weisbrod said at the World Cannabis Congress in Saint John, N.B., in his first-ever public remarks about Shoppersâ pot business. âI know the U.S. is looking at what weâre doing here, and itâs really important that we take this leadership stance.â
Los Angeles-based TruTrace sees big opportunities for its track-and-trace software in the U.S. CBD market. The U.S. legalized cannabidiol derived from hemp late last year, but some products have been found to contain less CBD than advertised, or even none at all. CVS and Walgreens, along with such other major chains as Kroger Co., have begun selling CBD lotions and balms at some of their stores.
âWe think this push with Shoppers will hopefully lead into a similar relationship with the Walgreens and CVSs of the world,â TruTrace Chief Executive Officer Robert Galarza said in an interview at the conference. âThereâs skepticism right now from the medical industry and weâre trying to help breach that; it all boils down to information. Information is power, data is power.â
Even in Canada, where medical cannabis has been legal since 2001 and recreational pot has been legal since last year, many doctors still wonât prescribe it as a treatment, said Weisbrod.
âThere are about 85,000 physicians in the country and the majority have not embraced this drug yet,â he said. âQuite frankly, they need more information and more data about the drugs theyâre putting their patients on.â
Standardized data will help doctors prescribe the right strains to their patients and contribute to the clinical trials that are underway in many parts of the industry.
âThey can say, âThis particular product, strain, cultivar has this chemistry component and my patient is consistently on this drug and heâs gotten great outcomes,ââ Weisbrod said. âThen we can start triangulating that data. This is a huge leap for the industry.â
Bloomberg.com