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South Carolina doctors can now prescribe cannabidiol (CBD), the non-psycho active part of marijuana plants, to their patients as part of medical treatment, but there is no legal system in place to make the oil available.South Carolina lawmakers passed a bill last session that allowed doctors to prescribe CBD oil.Sen. Tom Davis said, “Last year, it’s almost like we had the cart before the horse. We went ahead and allowed doctors to prescribe it to patients, but we really haven't provided a means by which that drug can be available.”Thursday, the Senate Medical Affairs Medical Marijuana Study Committee met in Greenville in an auditorium at the ICAR Campus to discuss the issue. There will be a similar meeting in Florence on December 4.Lisa Cline was one of those who came to speak to the committee in Greenville. She says making CDB oil available to her son is a life-saving decision. He was diagnosed with epilepsy when he was 3 years old.“All four medications that he is on are psychotropic, so the child I once knew is a child I no longer have,” she says.Wayne Boarders, with a group called Columbia N.O.R.M.L. (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) agrees.“What my organization would like to see is our hemp law be something that farmers can actually act on and start growing hemp as soon as they are able to,” he said.According to Davis that is the next move the committee is looking into.“Now, the next step since we've made it legal for doctors to prescribe it for patients, we have to come up with a methods by which the plant is grown and cultivated and extracted and dispensed here in South Carolina," Davis said.The Study Committee says their interest is not in approving marijuana for recreational use. They are strictly looking at approval for medical issues such as PTSD, glaucoma, autism, Parkinson’s disease and more.