
Consumers Frequently Report Substituting Cannabis For Alcohol And Other Substances
Observational studies have previously reported decreases in consumers’ alcohol use on days when they use cannabis

Observational studies have previously reported decreases in consumers’ alcohol use on days when they use cannabis

The Department of Health and Human Services recommended marijuana be moved to Schedule III last August and the Justice Department published a proposed rule to change cannabis’ classification in May. Here’s what’s next …

“The continued criminalization of cannabis only compounds the public safety risks that the unregulated marketplace poses to young people and others.”

One study “indicates that legalization and cannabis regulation, in certain contexts, may help reduce acute care utilization in vulnerable patient groups”

Researchers with the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor surveyed over 1,100 US adults regarding where they obtain cannabis-related information

Behind every one of these arrests, there’s a person – a person with a family, a person with a story

Legislation would eliminate ability of federal agencies to disqualify for jobs and security clearances solely for prior cannabis use

Investigators “did not observe functional differences between baseline and brain activation at one-year during working memory, reward processing, or inhibitory control tasks.”

Guest Opinion: These latest surveys are far from the only evidence that fewer teens are experimenting with cannabis

“The scientific evidence in favor of removing cannabis from Schedule I remains overwhelming.”
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