March 01, 2026 — 5 articles reviewed
This cycle’s coverage split sharply between cannabis as a therapeutic tool for pain management and cannabis as a contributor to psychiatric and gastrointestinal harm. The throughline for clinicians is the same one we keep returning to: context, dose, frequency, and patient selection determine whether cannabis helps or hurts.
🏈 Athletes, Opioids, and the Case for Cannabinoid Analgesia
NFL players and other professional athletes are publicly reconsidering opioid-based pain protocols in favor of cannabis, reflecting a broader cultural and clinical shift in how we think about musculoskeletal pain management. The risk-benefit calculus is real: opioids carry well-documented addiction liability and overdose mortality that cannabinoids do not approach at therapeutic doses. That said, we still lack robust longitudinal data on cannabis outcomes in high-performance populations with repetitive injury exposure. Clinicians should view this trend as an opening for structured conversations about multimodal analgesia, not as blanket endorsement of one approach over another. The takeaway is that cannabinoids deserve a seat at the pain management table, but they need to earn it through the same evidentiary standards we apply to everything else.
- #45Why Steelers And Other NFL Players Are Reconsidering Traditional Painkillers
🧠 Cannabis, Anxiety, and Depression: The Epidemiological Signal Is Getting Louder
A New York Post report highlighted research suggesting the association between cannabis use and anxiety and depression has strengthened over time, challenging the popular narrative that cannabis is a universally safe anxiolytic. The clinical implication is direct: we should be screening for cannabis use with the same rigor we apply to alcohol in patients presenting with mood disorders, especially among adolescents and young adults with developing neurobiology. Frequency, potency, and chronicity of use appear to matter enormously, and acute benefits do not necessarily predict long-term psychiatric outcomes. Patients who self-medicate anxiety with daily cannabis may be inadvertently worsening the very symptoms they are trying to treat. This does not mean cannabis cannot play a role in mental health care, but it means clinicians must be precise about who, how much, and for how long.
- #75Link between cannabis and anxiety, depression has ‘strengthened over time’ – NY Post
🤢 Cannabis Hyperemesis Syndrome: Two Reports, One Urgent Clinical Message
Two separate articles this cycle covered the rising prevalence of cannabis hyperemesis syndrome, with recent data documenting 4.4 cases per 100,000 emergency department visits and a clear correlation with high-potency, high-frequency consumption patterns. CHS remains underrecognized because patients often do not volunteer cannabis use and because the paradox of a known antiemetic causing intractable vomiting confounds clinical intuition. The pathognomonic triad of cyclical vomiting, compulsive hot bathing, and symptom resolution with cessation should prompt immediate screening for daily cannabis use in any unexplained hyperemesis workup. Standard antiemetics are frequently ineffective, and the only reliably successful intervention is complete abstinence from cannabis. As product potency continues to climb and daily use becomes more normalized, CHS will increasingly present in primary care and emergency settings, making routine substance use history essential.
- #78Cannabis Hyperemesis Syndrome: Clinical Signs to Watch
- #72Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome is on the rise: What symptoms to watch for – KGET.com
🏛️ New York at Five Years: The Messy Reality of Cannabis Policy and Medicine
Coverage of New York’s cannabis landscape five years post-legalization highlighted the ongoing tension between market expansion, regulatory complexity, and clinical evidence generation. The article referenced a study from the 2026 International Cannabis Research Conference on THC and CBD beverages, though the findings were incomplete in the available text. What matters clinically is that policy environments shape the products patients access, and rapid market evolution frequently outpaces the evidence base clinicians rely on. Physicians practicing in legalized states need to stay current not just on pharmacology but on what formulations and delivery methods their patients are actually using. The gap between what is commercially available and what is clinically studied remains one of the biggest challenges in cannabis medicine.
- #72New York Cannabis, Five Years In: Markets, Medicine, and the Messy Middle
This batch of news captures cannabis medicine in its full complexity: a legitimate analgesic option for some, a psychiatric risk factor for others, and a gastrointestinal emergency when used carelessly. Our job has not changed: match the right patient to the right intervention with honest counseling about what we know, what we suspect, and what we still need to learn.