Legally Defensible Medical Cannabis Authorizations

Same-Day Service Patient Advocate Gil Mobley, M.D.

Virtual Visits Phone: (417) 848-6100

Helping Patients With Medical Cannabis Authentication

Cannabis offers relief options for some medical conditions that traditional treatment cannot provide. However, the legality of its use causes concern to most people. With my expertise and knowledge, I provide legally defensible cannabis authorization to eligible patients in Missouri.

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An Experienced Physician in the Industry

With more than a decade of practice in the field, I have gained comprehensive cannabis-related experience and apply that to assist my clients. I am a certified medical review officer with Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) training and a Borkenstein certified DUI-Drug expert witness.

Focused on Patient Care and Welfare

As an advocate of risk and harm reduction, I facilitate discussions that cover all aspects of being safe and knowledgeable with cannabis or law. I have also worked with the Seattle Times to test strains and find hazards or incorrect regulations and actively traveled all over Missouri to pass laws.

From the New York Times

"In late February, Dr. Gil Mobley, a physician with a local clinic providing medical-marijuana authorizations, began a campaign called No on I-502, a new name for a group that, before, called itself Patients Against I-502. It anticipates donations from lawyers and doctors, said its treasurer, Anthony Martinelli, and pot dispensaries may also finance a fall volley of television commercials."

seattle

From the Seattle Times

"Seated at a desk inside his downtown Seattle hotel room, Dr. Gil Mobley pulled out a sterile field surgery kit, snapped on latex gloves and pulled a mask over his face.

He carefully arranged his medical instruments, grabbed tweezers and went to work.

Mobley, 60, wasn’t performing hotel-room surgery. He and fellow medical-marijuana activist Brian Stone were carefully preparing two ounces of Blazin’s Grapefruit purchased that morning from Uncle Ike’s Pot Shop in Seattle’s Central District. The pot cost more than $700.

The room reeked when a hotel maid cracked the door and said, “housekeeping.” Mobley shooed her away."

seattle weekly

Quip From the Seattle Weekly: THE HIGH ROAD

"With his white lab coat, close-cropped gray hair, and methodical efficiency, Mobley looks every bit the experienced doctor as he gives instructions with a faint Southern drawl. He asks Bigelow to walk heel-to-toe and stand on one leg. He tracks her eye movements with a small flashlight. He tells her to count down from 98 in increments of seven, rather than reciting the ABCs backward as in the classic field sobriety quiz. “I can’t do it myself,” Mobley jokes. “So I don’t put my patients through it.”

The fact that they’re trying to base this on a BAC [blood-alcohol content] model is senseless,” Mobley says. “It bothers me. The science isn’t there. Tens of thousands of people will be doing something illegal the minute that passes.”