Daily Digest: Last 24 Hours: Teen Brain Risk, Veteran Access, and the Regulatory Tug-of-War Over Hemp THC — February 24, 2026

Last 24 Hours
February 24, 2026 — 24 articles reviewed

The last 24 hours were dominated by mounting evidence on adolescent cannabis risk and serious mental illness, growing momentum for veteran access and Medicare coverage, and escalating federal and state battles over the future of hemp-derived THC products. Woven throughout was a persistent theme: the gap between what patients need and what our education, regulation, and insurance systems actually provide.

🧠 Adolescent Cannabis Use and Psychiatric Risk

A study out of Sweden received wide coverage this cycle, demonstrating that teen cannabis use follows the same population-level consumption distribution as alcohol — meaning when average use rises, heavy use rises disproportionately among the most vulnerable youth. Separately, research highlighted in Medscape linked adolescent cannabis use to increased risk for serious psychiatric conditions including psychotic and bipolar spectrum disorders, while additional reporting explored the association between early use and broader psychiatric diagnoses. The clinical throughline is consistent: the developing brain is uniquely sensitive to exogenous cannabinoids during synaptic pruning and neural circuit maturation, and age of initiation remains one of the most modifiable risk factors. For parents and clinicians, the takeaway is that community-wide prevention strategies and honest household conversations matter as much as individual screening — and that delaying use until the mid-20s is the single strongest harm reduction lever we have.

🎖️ Veterans, Seniors, and the Fight for Meaningful Access

New research found that veterans with substance use disorders are turning to cannabis to manage pain, anxiety, and sleep — often as an alternative to more dangerous medications like opioids and benzodiazepines. Florida is advancing legislation to slash medical marijuana registration fees for veterans, directly addressing a financial barrier that has kept many from accessing care. Meanwhile, reporting on potential Medicare coverage for cannabis-based medications signals what could be the most significant federal shift in cannabinoid therapy access for older adults in U.S. history. Taken together, these developments reinforce that the populations with the greatest clinical need — veterans and seniors on fixed incomes — are still the ones facing the steepest barriers to supervised cannabis care.

⚖️ Hemp THC Regulation: The Loophole Nobody Can Close

Federal and state lawmakers are pulling in multiple directions on hemp-derived THC products, with a key Congressional committee set to vote on delaying a federal ban, South Carolina advancing tighter state rules, and Indiana’s proposed ban dying at a legislative deadline. Consumer-facing coverage asking “are my THC gummies going away?” captured the anxiety millions of patients feel as their access hangs on unresolved policy debates. The core clinical problem remains unchanged: the 2018 Farm Bill created a market flooded with untested, inconsistently labeled THC products, and neither banning them nor ignoring them serves patients well. What is needed — and still missing — is a coherent regulatory framework that preserves access while enforcing safety, potency, and labeling standards.

📚 The Education Gap Is the Real Crisis

A pointed response to the New York Times framing of a “marijuana problem” argued that the real failure is not cannabis use itself but a medical education and regulatory system that has left physicians untrained and patients unguided. This framing is clinically important: without endocannabinoid medicine in medical school curricula, without federal research access, and without insurance infrastructure, patients navigate cannabis largely on their own. Nebraska’s bill to protect physicians who recommend cannabis from board discipline highlights the same structural problem from the provider side — doctors cannot participate in cannabis care if doing so threatens their licenses. Responsible cannabis medicine requires trained clinicians, protected practice, and honest public education rather than fear-based headlines.

📰 Browse all recent articles at cedclinic.com/category/cannabis-news/