More and more states are passing through the law permitting the use of medical marijuana. So what does it handle, who should be able to use it and should it?
Dr. Barth Wilsey, a pain medicine expert at the University of California Davis Medical Center, says the pain is the main reason for seeking prescriptions. It may be derived from headaches, cancer, etc., or long-term diseases such as glaucoma or neuralgia.
If you live in the legitimate state of medical marijuana and you think that this is useful for your doctor, you will get a "marijuana card". You are included in a list that allows you to purchase marijuana from an authorized seller (called a pharmacy).
The US Food and Drug Administration has also approved THC, a major component of cannabis, used to treat nausea and improve appetite. It can be obtained by prescription Marinol (Dronabinol) and Cesamet (Nablon)
Your body has created chemicals like marijuana that affect pain, inflammation and many other processes. Cannabis can sometimes help their natural chemicals work better, says Laura Borgelt of PharmD at the University of Colorado.
Marijuana for medical use is not monitored as FDA approved medicine. When using it, you do not know that it may cause cancer, its purity, efficacy or side effects
Only doctors should use medical marijuana. Doctors will not prescribe medical marijuana for people under the age of 18. Other people who should not be used:
Currently, medical marijuana is legal in 20 states and the District of Columbia. In these jurisdictions, the doctor advises that the medical marijuana must carry a (medical) marijuana card indicating that the substance is to be used for defined medical purposes. In the early 1990s, Dr. Raphael Mechoulam, the first person who identified (and synthesized) THC, discovered a neurotransmitter called anandamide. Anandamide seems to have a higher happiness and well-being, known as "happy molecules". Indeed, the word anandamid comes from the Sanskrit word "Ananda", which means "joy" or "happiness."
The legalization of medical marijuana dates back to the era of the most severe AIDS epidemics in the United States from the 1980s to the early 1990s. Illness is not superior to the death penalty, the victim is comforted by marijuana. A homosexual veteran, Dennis Peron, opened an illegal pharmacy in San Francisco's Castro district to provide marijuana to these injured young people. Peron continued to approve proposal 215, California passed in 1996 and became the first state to grant medical marijuana.
In 1996, California became the first state in the US to legalize cannabis for medical purposes. Marijuana for medical use is now legally used in 29 states. Opponents of medical marijuana believe that such laws will increase the use of cannabis cannabis but believe that medical marijuana will help resolve the US opioid crisis by reducing excessive death . In the initial argument, legalized medical marijuana increased youth recreational use through a new meta-analysis that aggregates eleven out of eleven large US survey data dating back to 1991. Independent Research Results - Analysis shows that there is no major change (increase or decrease) in youth's recreational use after medical marijuana is enacted. Available evidence suggests that adult entertainment may increase after the passage of medical cannabis, but few studies on the impact of adult cannabis on medical cannabis.