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Thursday, April 18, 2024

Bipartisan Bill Seeks to Study Medical Cannabis for Veterans

'VFW members tell us that medicinal cannabis has helped them cope with chronic pain and other service-connected health conditions... '

(Brett Rowland, The Center Square) Groups are backing a plan to study if medical cannabis could help veterans.

A new bipartisan bill would create a comprehensive research plan for the Department of Veterans Affairs to study the effectiveness of medicinal cannabis for the treatment of chronic pain and post-traumatic stress disorder.

U.S. Sens. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, and Jon Tester, D-Mont., introduced the measure.

“Our nation’s veterans deserve options when it comes to treating the wounds of war, which is why VA needs to have a better understanding of how medicinal cannabis plays a role in their healing,” Tester said in a statement. “Our bipartisan bill ensures VA is listening to the growing number of veterans who find critical relief from alternative treatments like medicinal cannabis, while working to empower veterans in making safe and informed decisions about their health.”

The VA Medicinal Cannabis Research Act would authorize the VA to implement a comprehensive research plan, including a series of clinical trials that assess the effectiveness of medicinal cannabis for the treatment of chronic pain and PTSD.

It would also expand cannabis research into other factors related to veterans’ health, such as improvements to mood and/or social functioning, impacts on other substance use and changes to overall quality of life.

The measure additionally requires the clinical trials examine the effects of different forms, potencies, and methods of cannabis administration.

Sullivan said better data are needed.

“Medicinal cannabis is already in use by thousands of veterans across the country, but we don’t yet have the data we need to understand the potential benefits and side effects associated with this alternative therapy,” he said in a statement.

Veterans of Foreign Wars also supports the measure.

“VFW members tell us that medicinal cannabis has helped them cope with chronic pain and other service-connected health conditions,” Pat Murray, director of National Legislative Service for Veterans of Foreign Wars, said in a statement.

“They cannot receive these services at VA because of VA’s bureaucratic hurdles,” Murray said. “VA uses evidence-based clinical guidelines to manage other pharmacological treatments of post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic pain, and substance use disorder because medical trials have found them effective. VA must expand research on the efficacy of non-traditional medical therapies, such as medicinal cannabis and other holistic approaches.”

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