A new Lancet Psychiatry review examined 54 randomized trials of cannabinoids for mental disorders and substance use disorders, and the evidence was thinner than many public claims suggest. A few outcomes showed signals, especially in cannabis use disorder, sleep-time outcomes in insomnia, tic severity, and autism-related measures, but much of the literature remained low certainty and short-term. This physician-guided review explains what the paper actually found, what it did not test, and how to think about the gap between clinical enthusiasm and evidence quality.
7 Powerful Truths About How Cannabis Works Differently Than Traditional Medicine
Cannabis doesnโt follow the usual rules of medicineโand thatโs the point. Unlike traditional pills aimed at single problems, cannabis works across systems, responds to context, and empowers patients to participate in their care. If traditional medicine is a pre-written script, cannabis is a choose-your-own-adventure.
7 Surprising Reasons Why Cannabis Language Is Broken
How We Talk About Cannabis Needs an Overhaul [caption id="attachment_10140" align="alignnone" width="300"] The unclear language of cannabis, as difficult to define as smoke[/caption] At CED Clinic, weโve seen firsthand how cannabis affects...