WHY IT MATTERS: For patients and clinicians globally, Ghana’s regulated medicinal cannabis program signals a growing international consensus that cannabis research deserves a legitimate scientific framework, which could accelerate cross-border data sharing and strengthen the overall evidence base for cannabis-based treatments. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Ghana’s formal entry into medicinal cannabis programming represents a significant shift for West Africa, where regulatory frameworks for cannabis-based medicine have historically been absent or prohibitive. Structured research programs allow countries to generate population-specific clinical data, which is critical given that most existing evidence comes from Western or Israeli cohorts that may not reflect genetic, dietary, or disease-burden differences in sub-Saharan African populations.
Study Finds Veterans With SUD Used Cannabis to Alleviate Pain, Anxiety, and Improve Poor …
WHY IT MATTERS: If you are a veteran managing pain, anxiety, or sleep issues alongside a substance use disorder, this research supports having an honest conversation with your care team about whether supervised cannabis use could be a safer part of your recovery plan. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: New research examining veterans with substance use disorders found that many turned to cannabis to manage pain, anxiety, and sleep disturbances during their treatment for non-cannabis-related SUD. This aligns with what we see clinically, where patients often use cannabis as an adjunct or alternative to more harmful substances, particularly opioids and benzodiazepines.
Texas Voters Weigh In on Marijuana Legalization in Primary Election
Massachusetts crossing $9 billion in legal cannabis sales proves that regulated markets workโgenerating tax revenue, creating jobs, and giving consumers access to safe, tested products. Marijuana legalization is on the primary election ballot in Texas, marking a significant moment for cannabis reform in one of the nation’s most conservative states and a major hemp-producing state. The ballot measure tests voter appetite for legalization in a state that has maintained strict cannabis laws while building a massive hemp industry.