Miracle Leaf® qualifying-conditions guide
Medical Marijuana for Opioid Use Disorder
Chronic relapsing disorder involving compulsive opioid use despite harmful consequences. Cannabis has insufficient high-quality evidence as an opioid-substitution therapy; some state programs nonetheless qualify OUD patients for medical cannabis access as an opioid-alternative pilot.
What is Opioid Use Disorder?
Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a chronic, relapsing condition characterized by compulsive opioid use, opioid tolerance and withdrawal, and continued use despite significant harm. Three evidence-based pharmacotherapies are collectively known as Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD): methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone. MOUD reduces mortality, illicit drug use, and overdose risk.
Does cannabis help Opioid Use Disorder?
High-quality evidence for cannabis as a treatment for opioid use disorder is insufficient. Some observational studies report lower opioid prescribing and overdose rates in states that legalized medical cannabis, but causal interpretation is contested. Cannabis is not FDA-approved as MOUD and is not recommended by SAMHSA or NIDA as an opioid-substitution therapy.
Several state medical cannabis programs (notably Illinois's Opioid Alternative Pilot Program, Pennsylvania, and New York) include OUD or opioid alternative status as a qualifying basis for cannabis registry access. The clinical rationale in these programs is harm reduction rather than disease-specific cannabis efficacy: providing a regulated, non-opioid substance to patients at risk of opioid overdose.
Patients with OUD should remain engaged with established MOUD therapy and discuss cannabis use openly with their addiction medicine provider.
Eligibility
State eligibility for Opioid Use Disorder
Whether this condition is listed varies by state program. A Miracle Leaf® physician determines eligibility during your evaluation.
| State | Qualifies? | Program |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | Not listed | Florida OMMU |
| Georgia | Not listed | Georgia DPH Low-THC Registry |
| Texas | Not listed | Texas Compassionate Use Program |
Telehealth visits are available in 22 states. See telehealth states
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
Is cannabis an effective substitute for opioid medications in OUD?
Is any cannabis-derived product FDA-approved for opioid use disorder?
Why do some state medical-cannabis programs list OUD as a qualifying condition?
What clinical concerns apply when OUD patients use cannabis?
Sources and citations
Keep reading
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Reviewed by Miracle Leaf® Editorial Team. This page summarizes current peer-reviewed evidence and federal guidance and is updated when the source documents materially change.