Article via El Planteo
Argentina’s Ministry of Health has published a sweeping new regulation reshaping how patients, caregivers, non-profit organizations and researchers can access and cultivate medical cannabis in the country. The updated framework, enacted through Resolution 1780/2025, replaces prior rules and imposes stricter eligibility criteria and oversight mechanisms.
The REPROCANN (Registro del Programa de Cannabis) is Argentina's national medical cannabis registry. Created under Law 27.350 in 2017 and expanded through various decrees and resolutions, it allows patients and authorized third parties to legally grow cannabis for therapeutic use with medical approval. REPROCANN also provides legal safeguards against criminal prosecution under Argentina's narcotics law.
1. Categories redefined
The new regulation formalizes four distinct categories:
2. Updated permit durations
This distinction was originally introduced via Resolution 766/2023 and has now been reaffirmed. The shorter terms for non-patient entities aim to improve monitoring and patient safety.
3. Stricter oversight for non-patient cultivators
Third-party growers can only cultivate for themselves and one additional patient, must submit regular reports, provide detailed cultivation plans, and cannot have criminal records related to narcotics.
4. Higher standards for organizations
Nonprofit organizations and research institutions must:
5. Mandatory physician qualifications
Doctors who prescribe cannabis under REPROCANN must now:
Argentina is among the few Latin American countries with a legal homegrow system embedded in federal health policy. However, concerns over abuse, especially involving third-party growers operating outside of therapeutic bounds, have led to calls for greater control.
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By tightening eligibility and enhancing scientific and medical oversight, this new regulation aims to preserve patient access while preventing backdoor commercialization.
Current permit holders are not immediately affected. However, all registrants must update their documentation within six months (by November 2025) to comply with the new rules, regardless of their permit's expiration date. Failure to do so will result in automatic revocation.
Note: While Argentina's cannabis exports remain limited and recreational use is still prohibited, its medical framework offers valuable insights for countries evaluating decentralized or homegrow-access models. The REPROCANN overhaul may signal a broader shift toward evidence-based cannabis policy in Latin America.
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