On Wednesday, Ohio's Medical Board will funnel 28 conditions the public petitioned to be treated with medical marijuana in the state down to the ones that they'll study more.

The petitions listed:

1. Anxiety

2. Anxiety

3. Anxiety, Depression

4. Anxiety, Depression, Bipolar Disorder

5. Anxiety, Depression, Bipolar Disorder, Arthritis

6. Asperger’s Disorder

7. Autism Spectrum Disorder

8. Autism Spectrum Disorder

9. Autism Spectrum Disorder

10. Bengals/Browns Fans

11. Cachexia/Wasting Syndrome

12. Chronic Back Chronic Hip

13. Depression

14. Diabetes, Hypoglycemia, Hyperglycemia, Concussions

15. Epstein-Barr

16. Gastroesophageal reflux disease

17. Generalized Anxiety Disorder

18. Generalized Anxiety Disorder

19. HIV/AIDS, Parkinson's

20. Insomnia

21. Lupus

22. Opioid Use Disorder

23. Opioid Use Disorder

24. Panic Attack and Anxiety

25. PTSD, Depression, Anxiety

26. Severe Social Anxiety

27. Stage 4 Breast Lung Lymph Nodes Cancer

28. Traumatic Brain Injury, Chronic Pain

Petitions asked for:

• The name and contact information

• Specific disease or condition requested to be added

• Information from experts who specialize in the study of the disease or condition

• Relevant medical or scientific evidence

• Consideration of whether conventional medical therapies are insufficient to treat or alleviate the disease or condition

• Evidence supporting the use of medical marijuana to treat or alleviate the disease or condition and other types of medical or scientific documentation

• Letters of support provided by physicians

The conditions will be "reviewed by subject matter experts," said a Medical Board Spokesperson in an email. "These experts may include physicians who specialize in the named conditions, experts who have experience with medical marijuana programs in other states, etc."

Eventually, the Medical Board Medical Marijuana Committee will recommend which conditions should go to the full board in the summer of 2020.

Cleveland's proposed ordinance has no impact on Ohio's Medical Marijuana Control Program, which requires patients to have medical cards giving them permission to buy and possess only marijuana grown and processed through the state program. At cultivation facilities, yellow tags allow state regulators to track all product created in the state under strict penalties for companies found to have untagged plants.

It's a long journey for parents like Tiffany Carwile. Her son, Jaxsyn, has autism and thinks that medical marijuana would help treat her son's conditions. After his diagnosis, she launched the Autism Alliance of Ohio.

"There has to be something out there that is safer, more effective, for those diagnosed," said Carwile.

Tiffany's son, Jaxsyn, was diagnosed with autism in 2016, right before she launched the Autism Alliance of Ohio.

She tells News 5 that her son had so many negative reactions to powerful medication prescribed by doctors that he is no longer taking any of them.

Carwile is hoping the Medical Board will consider not only Autism but also Asperger’s Disorder because she says the two are closely related.

Tiffany says she travels the state raising awareness and spreading information about Autism.

"Insomnia, anxiety, depression, a wide away of other symptoms and conditions can also still be treated well with medical cannabis," said Carwile.

She petitioned to get Autism to be an approved condition in 2019. Autism and Anxiety were ultimately rejected by the full Ohio Medical Board in September.

Tiffany says Jaxsyn isn't on any pharmaceuticals because of the negative reaction he's had from medications like these.

Meanwhile, the journey that made Danny Marlowe hit rock bottom and bounce back again started innocently enough.

A car crash meant Marlowe needed powerful pain medications.

Toby Talbot/AP FILE - This Feb. 19, 2013 file photo shows OxyContin pills arranged for a photo at a pharmacy in Montpelier, Vt. State attorneys general and lawyers representing local governments said Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2019, they are in active negotiations with Purdue Pharma, maker of the prescription painkiller OxyContin, as they attempt to reach a landmark settlement over the nation's opioid crisis. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, File)

"I was prescribed vicodin or percoset and I became addicted to it," said Marlowe. "It became a habit."

Marlowe says the pills helped lift his spirits on a bad day and he took others as a reward for a good day. Like thousands of other Ohioans, Marlowe was hooked.

John Moore Oxycodone pain pills prescribed for a patient with chronic pain lie on display on March 23, 2016 in Norwich, CT.

"Where it's not so much you want to take it anymore, it gets to the point where you need to take it," said Marlowe.

He thinks medical marijuana could have drastically changed his experience with addition, maybe even keeping him away from the powerful pills that got him addicted in the first place.

For most conditions, Marlowe agrees with Carwile that medical marijuana could help treat chronic pain and some conditions. But he does not think it's a good idea to allow medical marijuana for Opioid Use Disorder.

Danny is off drugs for nearly three years after battling opioid addiction for more than a decade.

"Going through the opioid withdrawal is horrible," said Marlowe. "It's like the flu times 100."

Still, Marlowe says more drugs doesn't seem like a good idea.

"Having Medical Marijuana to come off of [opioids], I would not recommend because at the end of the day, us drug addicts, we're going to go back to what we like," said Marlowe.

Ohio's Medical Board is expected to decide if any new conditions could be added over the summer.