Nebraska’s Medical Cannabis Commission holds hearing on emergency regulations – KETV

WHY IT MATTERS: If Nebraska’s 5-gram THC cap becomes permanent, patients with serious medical conditions may find that legally obtained cannabis falls far short of the amounts needed for meaningful symptom management, effectively rationing medicine by regulation rather than clinical need. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Nebraska’s newly formed medical cannabis commission is establishing emergency regulations that include a strict 90-day THC possession cap of 5 grams for patients, which falls dramatically below dosing thresholds considered therapeutically meaningful for most qualifying conditions. Clinically, patients managing chronic pain, neurological disorders, or cancer-related symptoms often require significantly higher amounts to achieve consistent symptom relief, making such a low ceiling a practical barrier to effective care.

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Proposed Nebraska Medical Marijuana Emergency Rules Spark Concern (THC Limits, Rural Access)

WHY IT MATTERS: If Nebraska finalizes these emergency rules as written, patients with legitimate medical needs may find themselves rationed to doses too low to provide meaningful relief, with no practical path to adjust their treatment for 90 days at a time. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Nebraska’s proposed emergency medical cannabis rules include a 5-gram THC dispensing limit every 90 days and a 40-milligram per-dose cap, both of which reflect a fundamental misunderstanding of how cannabis medicine works in clinical contexts. These restrictions could leave patients with serious conditions severely undertreated, particularly those managing chronic pain, cancer-related symptoms, or neurological disorders who often require individualized dosing that far exceeds arbitrary bureaucratic thresholds.

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