MjLink Cannabis Business News and Press
It’s now a widely-held and recognized belief that cannabis helps patients with epilepsy maintain a better quality of life and find respite from seizures.
With the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) citing that epilepsy affects over 3.4 million Americans, identifying a key function in the disease’s ability to target certain parts of the body gives researchers key insight into understanding how and why epilepsy occurs.
In a new study published in the Annals of Neurology, researchers found that an autoantibody, which works against the body, seems to be responsible for causing epilepsy in some patients.
Click here to read the complete article
Kate-Madonna Hindes ~ TheFreshToast.com ~
It’s now a widely-held and recognized belief that cannabis helps patients with epilepsy maintain a better quality of life and find respite from seizures.
With the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) citing that epilepsy affects over 3.4 million Americans, identifying a key function in the disease’s ability to target certain parts of the body gives researchers key insight into understanding how and why epilepsy occurs.
In a new study published in the Annals of Neurology, researchers found that an autoantibody, which works against the body, seems to be responsible for causing epilepsy in some patients.
Click here to read the complete article
Kate-Madonna Hindes ~ TheFreshToast.com ~
For the second-straight month, Oregon broke sales records for legal marijuana.
There is one bright spot in the economy: marijuana sales. In April, Oregon saw $89 million in legal marijuana sales.
The Oregon Liquor Control Commission reports marijuana sales were up 45% in April, compared to last year, making April 2020 the largest month on record for the state.
Click here to read the complete article
Kyle Iboshi ~ KGW.com ~
For the second-straight month, Oregon broke sales records for legal marijuana.
There is one bright spot in the economy: marijuana sales. In April, Oregon saw $89 million in legal marijuana sales.
The Oregon Liquor Control Commission reports marijuana sales were up 45% in April, compared to last year, making April 2020 the largest month on record for the state.
Click here to read the complete article
Kyle Iboshi ~ KGW.com ~
A survey on marijuana use among orthopedic patients showed many believe marijuana is beneficial for managing pain and other medical conditions.
Geoffrey S. Marecek, MD, and colleagues used a voluntary questionnaire to collect patient demographics as well as the frequency of, methods of and reasons for marijuana use among 275 patients undergoing orthopedic surgery.
Researchers categorized patients as marijuana users if they had used marijuana in the past year.
Click here to read the complete article
Healio.com ~
As part of Gov. Charlie Baker's phased reopening plan, recreational cannabis stores in Massachusetts will be allowed to reopen for curbside pickup on May 25.
Under Phase 2 of Baker's reopening plan, pot shops can reopen to in-person sales for recreational customers like any other retail outlet, provided they follow social distancing and other regulations intended to stop or slow the spread of the virus.
It's not clear when Phase 2 will happen, but it will be at least three weeks, according to the state's plan.
Click here to read the complete article
WBUR.com ~
“There’s a need for trained workers and these courses do a good job mixing lectures, quizzes and other interactive media elements."
At first glance, they don’t seem to have much in common: college administrators seeking new revenue sources because their students have all gone home, and displaced workers looking into the legal cannabis industry because it’s still hiring during the pandemic.
But the groups are converging.
Click here to read the complete article
Julie Weed ~ Forbes.com ~
Leading researchers in the USA will check the effectiveness of whole-plant versus single-extract CBD under a $9 million project aimed at enlightening consumers and doctors.
Harvard Medical School, which will lead the research project, and Massachusetts Institute of Techology (MIT), received $4.5 million each to support the series of studies.
The grant, reportedly the largest ever for cannabis research, was provided by Charles R. Broderick, an early investor in the Canadian medical marijuana market, and an alumnus of both schools.
Click here to read the complete article
HempToday.net ~
A new marketing report found that as cannabis continues to mainstream its way into American culture, more adults are using the herb than ever before.
The report is based on a survey from MRI Simmons, a marketing research firm.
One of the report’s most eye-opening insights is the increase in cannabis consumption over a one-year period. In 2018, only 16 percent of respondents said they used weed at least once that year.
But by 2019, that figure jumped to 22 percent, or just over 1 out of 5 adults, Marketing Charts reported.
Click here to read the complete article
Colorado hotel room rentals increased considerably after the state began legal marijuana sales, a newly published study reveals. Washington State also saw increases in tourism after legalization, though the effect there was more modest.
The two states were the first in the U.S. to allow adult-use cannabis through laws approved by voters in 2012.
By comparing hotel room rentals in Colorado and Washington to states that did not change their legal status of marijuana from 2011 through 2015, researchers found that legalization coincided with a significant influx of tourists and a rise in hotel revenue.
Click here to read the complete article
Ben Aldin ~ MarijuanaMoment.net ~
The optimal minimum legal age for non-medical cannabis use is 19 years of age, according to a study published in BMC Public Health.
A team of researchers at the Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada, investigated how Canadians who started using cannabis at several young ages differed across important outcomes (educational attainment, cigarette smoking, self-reported general and mental health) in later-life.
Click here to read the complete article
BioMed Central via MedicalXpress.com ~
Would you buy a painting made by a dog? What if it came with some weed as a free gift? Welcome to District Derp, an art gallery in Washington, DC, with a couple quirks.
All the artwork is painted by Sudo, a 4-year-old Alaskan Klee Kai.
And each painting comes with a "gift" -- an amount of marijuana proportional to the cost of the painting.
Click here to read the complete article
Will Storey, Kaitlyn Wang and Mark Abadi ~ BusinessInsider.com ~
Cannabis farmers often have to face the mercy of a number of exterior factors damaging their crops – so, how can they protect their plants from pests?
Problems that can impact cannabis plants include issues such as the ambient climate and acute weather events, soil quality, insects and other pests, which can consume and contaminate the crop, including mites, aphids, flies, worms, fungi, mould and pathogens – and even some opportunistic mammals, such as rodents and deer.
So, how can cannabis farmers protect their crops from pests?
Click here for the complete article
HealthEuropa.eu ~
New York City has barred many employers from making job applicants get tested for marijuana use, under a law that took effect over the weekend.
It passed last year as the nation’s biggest city took a novel step in the evolving regulation of workplace policies about pot.
A few months later, Nevada passed a similar law — it says applicants can’t be turned down for failing a pot test — that went into effect Jan. 1. Unlike in Nevada, recreational pot is illegal in New York. Medicinal use is allowed.
Click here to read the complete article
Jennifer Peltz ~ Associated Press ~
The endogenous compound anandamide -- often referred to as the body's own marijuana -- plays a role in erasing memories of a traumatic event.
This was discovered by an international team led by Leiden chemist Mario van der Stelt.
The results have been published in Nature Chemical Biology and may provide a starting point for the treatment of anxiety disorders such as PTSD.
Click here to read the complete article
Leiden University via MedicalXpress.com ~
Poll: Most People In Recreational Marijuana States Believe Legalization Is A Success - Cannabis News
People who live in states that have legalized marijuana for adult use broadly feel that the policy has been a success, according to a new poll.
A majority of people from eight states that were surveyed said the programs are working well.
And in Maine, which legalized cannabis in 2016 but still doesn’t have any adult-use retail shops open, people still said the law is more of a success than a failure by a greater than two-to-one plurality.
Click here to read the complete article
Kyle Jaeger ~ MarijuanaMoment.net ~
Israel gave approval on Wednesday for exports of medical cannabis, paving the way for sales abroad that the government expects to produce hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.
“This is a significant step for exporters and the Israeli industry, which will enable both expansion of export opportunities as well as rising employment ... in the field,” said Economy Minister Eli Cohen.
Cohen gave final approval for the exports more than a year after the cabinet backed a new law to permit them. Cohen’s order takes effect in 30 days, allowing exporters to apply for a licence from the Health Ministry.
Click here to read the complete article
Steven Scheer ~ Reuters.com ~
State lawmakers are pushing forward with a plan to dramatically increase the number of licenses to grow, process and sell medical marijuana in Missouri, months before dispensaries around the state are expected to open their doors.
The move represents a rebuke to the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS), which last year decided to issue the minimum of licenses required by the voter-approved constitutional amendment that legalized medical marijuana in Missouri, which totaled around 340.
Click here to read the complete article
Jason Hancock ~ Kansas City Star ~
As marijuana policies shift within pro sports leagues, could the NCAA be next?
The National Football League has adjusted its drug policy to no longer include suspensions following a positive test for marijuana.
The change comes as part of the new collective bargaining agreement reached by the NFL Players Association and owners on March 14. With this change, the NFL joined a number of professional sports leagues that have begun to implement less restrictive policies on the usage of marijuana.
Click here to read the complete article
Rich Rigney ~ PSUVanguard.com ~
There isn’t one medical sector that has been untouched by the effects of technology, and the cannabis industry is no exception.
In the past decade alone, the world of medical marijuana (and recreational cannabis for that matter) has experienced a massive boom.
Some people are even referring to our time as the “weed” era, and considering the spike in cannabis consumption and approval rates, this isn’t far off.
Click here to read the complete article
Jacob Scott ~ HealthTechZone.com ~