Why Canadian insurers are wary of covering medical marijuana

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By Nichola Saminather

TORONTO, July 13 (Reuters) - Sun Life Financial, Canada's No. 2 insurer, recently started covering medical marijuana in its Canadian health insurance plan - more than 17 years after the country first legalized it.

The coverage, which requires employers to pay a premium, extends only to a handful of conditions as a last resort.

"It's not medical marijuana for any purpose," said Dave Jones, senior vice-president of group benefits at Sun Life. "It's for specific conditions and symptoms where the evidence is clear that medical cannabis has enough value to outweigh risks."

Sun Life's cautious approach reflects concern across Canada's health insurance industry over the potentially high costs of covering medical marijuana - in many cases higher than established pharmaceuticals - and thin clinical evidence for its efficacy.

Canada, a pioneer in approving medical marijuana, legalized recreational use this summer. Canadian insurers' reluctance to cover it suggests most patients here and elsewhere may continue to bear most of its cost despite pending legalization efforts worldwide.

Insurers' hesitance stems in part from the experience of agencies in Canada and other countries that have offered coverage and seen costs and usage skyrocket. And many doctors who commonly prescribe pot don't properly examine or follow their patients, said Cyd Courchesne, chief medical officer at Veterans Affairs Canada, which has covered medical cannabis since 2008.

"If I was working for any other company, and I was their medical director, I would say do not reimburse," Courchesne said. "We do not have enough information right now."

Cannabis research has been held back globally because most countries ban its use, making purchases for studies illegal or difficult. That's changing in Canada, where a booming marijuana industry and the government now finance medical research, including efforts to create cannabis-based pharmaceutical-like drugs.

Canada law allows patients to buy medical cannabis with money from health-care spending accounts, which are financed by employers, but insurance companies make their own decisions on coverage.

Some insurers are starting to cover pot in response to rising demand from employees of the firms buying their coverage. Grocery chain Loblaw last year became the first major Canadian company to ask its insurers to cover medical marijuana.

But insurers are treading carefully. Sun Life covers pain associated with cancer, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, HIV and palliative care for serious illnesses; chemotherapy-induced nausea; spasticity from MS; and anorexia due to HIV.