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BumRushDaShow

(152,149 posts)
Sun May 11, 2025, 06:13 AM Yesterday

New bill would ease rules on researching cannabis and other schedule I drugs

Source: The Guardian

Sat 10 May 2025 07.00 EDT
Last modified on Sat 10 May 2025 18.16 EDT


A recently introduced bill, if it passes, would allow research on cannabis despite its schedule I status, which some experts say could help policymakers “craft effective” legislation in the future and potentially allow more clinical research on medical cannabis. Representatives Dina Titus and Ilhan Omar introduced the Evidence-Based Drug Policy Act of 2025 (EBDPA) last week, which would radically ease research restrictions on cannabis and other schedule I substances.

Omar said in a statement that the law would allow research to catch up with the US’s increasing cannabis consumption: “We need drug policy to follow the science and reflect the reality on the ground in states across the country.” Schedule I substances, including cannabis, heroin and MDMA, are legally defined as having “no accepted medical use” and a “high potential for abuse”.

Medical cannabis proponents point out that cannabis’s federal schedule I status is contradictory, given that patients throughout the US already use cannabis for medical purposes. The Biden administration pushed for cannabis to be reclassified as a schedule III substance, which would alter its legal status and make cannabis-based medicines eligible for FDA approval. But the rescheduling process has continued to stall since Donald Trump re-entered the Oval Office.

Unlike rescheduling, the EBDPA would be simple to enact. In its current form, it repeals sections of the Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 1998 that forbid federal funds from going towards research of schedule I substances, and that require the ONDCP to oppose any attempts to legalize schedule I substances. Still, there are questions as to whether this bill has the ability to pass.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/10/cannabis-medical-research-bill

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New bill would ease rules on researching cannabis and other schedule I drugs (Original Post) BumRushDaShow Yesterday OP
I have multiple friends who are helped by cannabis. forgotmylogin Yesterday #1

forgotmylogin

(7,836 posts)
1. I have multiple friends who are helped by cannabis.
Sun May 11, 2025, 11:20 AM
Yesterday

The most successful was an older neighbor with fibromyalgia. Cannabis was legalized in my state but she avoided it because she never wanted to get "high". She described having a base level of pain since age 12 that would make a normal person scream because she was accustomed to it. One evening she rode with me to the store and I was searching for a close place to park so she wouldn't have to walk until she said "Can I tell you a secret? I've been mostly pain-free since I started using the drops, so park anywhere!" By "drops" she meant she had acquired sublingual THC tincture and was using drops under her tongue which actually helped mitigate her pain.

She also reported that her doctor ordered a biopsy for a node in her tongue that they wanted to test for cancer. It took 3 months to get the specialist appointment for the procedure, but a month before that she saw her doctor again who said "We may as well cancel your biopsy; there's nothing here to take a sample of anymore." In lab tests, cannabis and its compounds have shown they can reduce tumor growth in mice. We can't be sure the THC had an effect but it's cool to think about.

Other friends of mine use edibles for chronic generalized nerve pain that isn't affected by anything else, and another college friend said weed was the only thing that could stop a migraine in its tracks.

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