Curing cancer with Cannabidiol?
- CANNABIS OIL, NEWS
- April 24, 2013
Australian researchers have published the first robust clinical study proving that medicinal cannabis effectively treats the debilitating effects of Tourette syndrome. The findings—which show a statistically and clinically significant reduction in motor and vocal tics in just six weeks—are published in the journal NEJM Evidence. The clinical trial was led by neuropsychiatrist Dr. Philip Mosley, a Research Fellow
READ MOREIt’s not addictive, won’t get you high and has been touted as a magic bullet for everything from anxiety to eczema. So why is cannabidiol (CBD) still so hard to get, seven years after it was legalised? In 2018, Justine Martin asked her neurologist for a prescription for CBD oil for multiple sclerosis-related pain that was keeping
READ MOREOn Friday, Florida-based Trulieve Cannabis Corp. opened its first two medical marijuana dispensaries in Georgia — one at 220 North Cobb Parkway in Marietta and another in Macon. The openings came after the Georgia Access to Medical Cannabis Commission approved five dispensing licenses for Trulieve and Botanical Sciences LLC, which had both already received licenses
READ MOREA mum who won a fight for her severely ill son to get medical cannabis on the NHS is being used by a “cowboy” CBD oil firm to flog its product on TikTok. Hannah Deacon helped change the law when she secured epileptic Alfie Dingley a prescription to control life-threatening seizures. The 11-year-old is one of only
READ MOREBeing a woman is complex, there is no doubt about this. How we undergo the natural phenomena of menstruation is commendable. But do we really need to bear this pain when Cannabis oil can take away all the pain and discomfort which comes with periods, Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), Polycystic ovarian disorder (PCOD), or Menopause?
READ MOREMedical cannabis may reduce the need for pain relief in cancer patients, a study has found. Researchers looked at 358 patients, all of whom were taking the drug because conventional painkillers did not fully work for them. They reported a reduction of more than 40 per cent in how much pain affected their ability to go about
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