What Is Medical Marijuana and Facts You Need to Know
What Is Medical Marijuana and Facts You Need to Know
Medical marijuana has been legalized in 33 states, and many medical experts now approve of its use for particular conditions that affect Americans over the age of 50. This year, the AARP Board of Directors considered the emerging evidence suggesting that marijuana is helpful in treating such conditions and symptoms, then approved a policy supporting the use of medical marijuana in the states that have legalized it, and supporting further research on medical use of cannabinoids to help alleviate the symptoms of diseases and the side effects of the treatment for diseases. Here are seven basic facts you need to know: AARP/PHOTO BY YASU + JUNKO
Under federal law, CBD (cannabidiol) derived from marijuana, which contains the psychoactive ingredient THC, is illegal; hemp-derived CBD that contains no more than 0.3 percent THC is legal to sell and consume — though the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says it is illegal to market CBD in food and supplements. Thirteen states have passed laws allowing the sale of CBD/low THC products. Details vary: Check your state’s laws for the latest info. For more information see the .
Medical Marijuana Your Questions Answered and What We Know Today
Who uses it how it may help and what the science says
Medical marijuana has been legalized in 33 states, and many medical experts now approve of its use for particular conditions that affect Americans over the age of 50. This year, the AARP Board of Directors considered the emerging evidence suggesting that marijuana is helpful in treating such conditions and symptoms, then approved a policy supporting the use of medical marijuana in the states that have legalized it, and supporting further research on medical use of cannabinoids to help alleviate the symptoms of diseases and the side effects of the treatment for diseases. Here are seven basic facts you need to know: AARP/PHOTO BY YASU + JUNKO
Medical Marijuana br What You Need to Know
The Basics
1 You are on your own br
You may be thinking, Hey, if it’s "medical,” a doctor will help me navigate the green new world. Often, that’s not so. A few users have a medical marijuana doctor who walks them through products and shows them how to use a vape pen. But that’s unusual. “Older people think there will be a prescription waiting for them at the dispensary, like at a drugstore,” says Rick McKnight, 72, a retired sales executive from Ocala, Florida, who self-treats hip pain with marijuana. “It’s not like that. You get your medical marijuana card. The doctor gives you some recommendations — not a prescription. Then you’re on your own.”2 Dispensaries carry a dizzying variety of products br
It’s like a trip to an adults-only candy store, loaded with tinctures and oils, vape pens and “flower” (dried marijuana), mouth sprays and skin patches, fancy chocolate truffles, cinnamon-scented cookies, and sodas, balms and lotions, all laced with the active ingredients in cannabis. You’ll also find high-strength concentrates, waxes and resins. What’s on sale differs by state, and free samples and in-store use are against the law.3 Today s cannabis is super-potent br
“This is not the marijuana people smoked in dorm rooms in the 1970s,” says Staci Gruber, the director of the Marijuana Investigations for Neuroscientific Discovery (MIND) program at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts. “You have to be careful.” Clandestine marijuana growers have for decades been cross-breeding and selecting the highest-potency plants to create more powerful pot. Levels of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC — the compound responsible for marijuana’s euphoric highs — in cannabis averaged 4 percent in 1995 and rose to 17 percent by 2017, studies show. It hasn’t stopped there. You can buy sealed bags and rolled joints featuring marijuana strains topping 28 percent THC, and concentrates with 85 to 90 percent. Fortunately, plenty of products that are low in THC and high in cannabidiol, or CBD — the other major cannabis compound — are available. Note: Potency varies by strain and form, and it can often be tough to gauge a patient's tolerance. So before a patient engages in a cannabis-based medical treatment, he or she should consult their doctor and approach with caution; there’s limited scientific research and, as with any medication, the effects vary by user.4 Edibles only seem low-risk br
Hey, it’s just candy, right? But that rainbow-hued gummy bear or little chocolate square could contain 10 milligrams of THC, plus CBD. That’s three to four times the amount experts recommend for older adults. “Edibles take from 30 minutes to four hours to take effect. It’s easy to eat more because you aren’t feeling anything after a few minutes,” says Danielle Fixen, an assistant professor in the University of Colorado’s pharmacy school. “But then the effects last six to eight hours.”5 There s not enough good science about the effect on humans br
And the main reason for that research gap is that at the federal level, cannabis — medical or recreational — is an illegal Schedule I controlled substance, legally on par with heroin, LSD and street fentanyl. That’s why doctors can’t technically prescribe it; they can only give you state-required permission to use it. More important, scientists can’t buy it at a dispensary and study it in most labs. That research gap means only a handful of the common uses of cannabis are backed by substantial evidence from human clinical trials, according to a rigorous 2017 report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM). Other popular uses — including for dementia, cancer, fibromyalgia, glaucoma, depression and even insomnia — are less solid, the NASEM experts say. Their bottom line (albeit two years old): “Conclusive evidence regarding the short- and long-term health effects (harms and benefits) of cannabis use remains elusive.”Cannabis Where Is It Legal
AARP Under federal law, all cannabis is illegal to sell, possess or use. The feds, however, are reluctant to enforce the prohibition in the face of mounting support by states. Thirty-three states (plus the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) permit medical marijuana for qualifying patients; a doctor’s certification and patient card are generally required. State laws differ on such critical questions as who can grow it, who can sell it and what health conditions qualify. Eleven states and the District of Columbia allow recreational marijuana use.Under federal law, CBD (cannabidiol) derived from marijuana, which contains the psychoactive ingredient THC, is illegal; hemp-derived CBD that contains no more than 0.3 percent THC is legal to sell and consume — though the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says it is illegal to market CBD in food and supplements. Thirteen states have passed laws allowing the sale of CBD/low THC products. Details vary: Check your state’s laws for the latest info. For more information see the .