WHY IT MATTERS: If Mississippi’s expanded eligibility criteria are signed into law, patients with conditions previously excluded from the state program may finally qualify for legal medical cannabis access through licensed providers. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Mississippi continues to refine its medical cannabis program through legislative debate, with ongoing questions about which patient populations qualify for access and whether cannabis can be administered in clinical settings like hospitals. Expanding qualifying conditions is a clinically meaningful step, as many patients with legitimate therapeutic needs have historically been excluded from state programs due to overly narrow eligibility criteria.
What effects does THC have on youth who dabble? – YouTube
WHY IT MATTERS: Parents and young patients who view occasional THC use as low-stakes should understand that the adolescent brain processes cannabinoids differently than an adult brain, and even limited exposure during developmental years can have measurable effects on mood regulation, memory, and long-term mental health trajectory. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Cannabis use during adolescence and young adulthood intersects with critical windows of neurodevelopmental maturation, particularly in the prefrontal cortex and limbic system, where endocannabinoid signaling plays a foundational regulatory role. Even casual or infrequent THC exposure during these years carries a distinct risk profile compared to adult use, including associations with altered executive function, increased vulnerability to anxiety and mood disorders, and in genetically susceptible individuals, elevated risk for psychosis-spectrum conditions.
Cannabis Munchies Driven by Brain Reward Signals | Technology Networks
WHY IT MATTERS: Patients using cannabis therapeutically for appetite stimulation can now have greater confidence that the effect is rooted in measurable brain biology, not just anecdote, which may help guide more precise dosing conversations with their physicians. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Cannabis-induced hyperphagia, colloquially known as “the munchies,” has long been observed clinically but its precise neurological underpinnings in humans have remained incompletely characterized. Emerging research points to cannabis activating reward-related brain circuitry, particularly pathways involving endocannabinoid signaling that amplify the hedonic and motivational aspects of eating.
Daily Digest: Last 24 Hours: Adolescent Brain Risk, Global Policy Shifts, and the Science Catching Up to the Clinic โ February 26, 2026
Last 24 Hours February 26, 2026 โ 23 articles reviewed The last 24 hours brought a striking convergence of adolescent psychiatric risk data, accelerating international cannabis legislation, and mechanistic neuroscience that finally...
Legislation on medical cannabis: DOH bares conditions – Cebu Daily News
WHY IT MATTERS: Filipino patients with conditions like chronic pain, epilepsy, or cancer-related symptoms may soon have a clearer legal pathway to access medical cannabis, but only if proposed legislation meets the scientific standards regulators are demanding. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Medical cannabis legislation in the Philippines is advancing through regulatory channels, with health authorities emphasizing that any framework for legal access must be grounded in robust clinical and scientific evidence. This position reflects a cautious but scientifically oriented approach to policy, requiring that efficacy and safety data drive decisions rather than anecdotal reports or political pressure.
House panel revives medical cannabis bill – Daily Tribune
WHY IT MATTERS: Patients in the Philippines with conditions like epilepsy, chronic pain, or cancer-related symptoms who currently have no legal access to cannabinoid therapies may gain a regulated pathway to these treatments if this bill advances to full legislative approval and enactment. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: The Philippines is advancing legislation to permit medical cannabis, with House committees on health and dangerous drugs giving approval to a consolidated bill that would establish a regulated framework for therapeutic use. This represents a significant shift in a country that has historically maintained strict anti-drug policies, including severe penalties under the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act.
Brain Researchers Finally Know Why Cannabis Use Increases Appetite – The Debrief
WHY IT MATTERS: Patients using cannabis for appetite stimulation, including those managing cachexia or chemotherapy-related anorexia, now have stronger neurological evidence supporting what clinicians have observed for years, which may help guide more targeted and confident therapeutic use. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: The appetite-stimulating effects of cannabis, commonly known as “the munchies,” have long been observed clinically but the precise neurological mechanisms were not well characterized until recently. Research has now identified how cannabinoids interact with specific brain circuits to drive increased appetite, independent of the type or palatability of food available.
Health advocate underscores ‘real danger’ in medical cannabis legalization in PH
WHY IT MATTERS: Patients in the Philippines who might benefit from cannabis-based therapies for conditions like chronic pain or epilepsy are directly affected by whether lawmakers build a regulated, medically supervised program or stall indefinitely due to fear-based opposition. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: The debate over medical cannabis legalization in the Philippines centers on legitimate concerns about regulatory infrastructure, diversion risk, and whether the healthcare system has the capacity to oversee a new therapeutic category responsibly. Opponents raise valid points about the need for physician education, product quality standards, and enforcement mechanisms before any framework goes live.
Summary Since Last Update: Teen Brain Risk, Regulatory Crossroads, and the Veterans Cannabis Signal โ February 24, 2026
A synthesis of 22 recently added cannabis articles โ key themes, clinical context, and Dr. Caplan’s take.
Horrifying simulation shows what happens to your body if you smoke weed every day
WHY IT MATTERS: If you are a daily cannabis user or a parent of a teenager considering cannabis, this research reinforces why age of initiation, dosing discipline, and medical guidance matter for protecting long-term brain health. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: Daily cannabis use, particularly when initiated during adolescence, carries real clinical risks including changes to brain development such as accelerated cortical thinning in the prefrontal cortex. While sensationalized media simulations often exaggerate these effects, the underlying research on adolescent neurodevelopment and heavy daily use is legitimate and something clinicians must take seriously when counseling patients.