Medical cannabis and driving
Medical cannabis use is increasingly common in Australia. Patients and physicians need to be aware of the important implications that such use may have for driving.
Medical cannabis use is increasingly common in Australia. Patients and physicians need to be aware of the important implications that such use may have for driving.
Debi Bair is a Natural Health Consultant, Herbalist and cannabis advocate who reached for plants after a devastating car crash left her with more than 50 broken bones in 1997.
Most British people would consider using cannabis to treat medical conditions, particularly if prescribed by a doctor, a new study has shown.
With the increased use of cannabis in the medicinal and recreational domains, it is becoming more important for physicians to better understand its harmful and beneficial effects.
The legalization of medical cannabis has led to its use in treating a growing number of health problems.
Smoking weed should eventually become legal in Germany. The political will is there. But actually implementing it is hampered by international law, bureaucracy and tax rules. Activists want the process sped up.
Cannabis preparations are likely effective at preventing and treating migraines, according to a recently published review of available research.
The idea of a cannabis product creating a sort of psychedelic experience is not a new one.
A growing number of Americans are using cannabis as it becomes legalized for recreational use in a rapidly increasing number of U.S. states.
Around 17,000 people in the UK are now thought to have received legal medical cannabis for a range of conditions including chronic pain, depression, insomnia and Parkinson’s.