This article is sponsored by the medicinal cannabis certifications clinic at www.MMJ.com. Patients are able to complete an online consultation with the medical doctor online at www.MMJ.com to enroll in the state's program.
This article is sponsored by the medicinal cannabis certifications clinic at www.MMJ.com. Patients are able to complete an online consultation with the medical doctor online at MMJ.com to enroll in the state's program.
Click on this link for more information on the Vermont medicinal cannabis program.
Chronic pain
More than 600,000 Americans turn to cannabis for relief from chronic pain — and the scientific evidence for its effectiveness is substantial. In gold-standard randomized clinical trials of people who had agonizing health concerns — peripheral neuropathy (nerve pain from diabetes), spinal cord injury, HIV or complex regional pain syndrome, cancer, chemotherapy, muscle and joint problems, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis — cannabis reduced pain by 40 percent, according to the 2017 NASEM report. In a recent Canadian study, cannabis even soothed arthritic lab rats. Surprisingly, there’s little evidence (yet) from human studies for the most common form of arthritis, osteoarthritis — the wear-and-tear joint disease affecting 50 percent of adults age 65-plus. Clinical trials are underway. But who’s waiting? Arthritis was the top reason older adults used cannabis in a 2019 Colorado survey, followed by back pain. Overall, 79 percent said it helped. Patients are able to complete an online consultation with the medical doctor online at MMJ.com to enroll in the state's program.
Click on this link for more information on the Vermont medicinal cannabis program.
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