Growing research supports the therapeutic benefits of medical marijuana

It provides so many beneficial medical treatments

I enjoy reading scientific journals for innovations in psychology and sociology. Those were my two main academic strengths in undergraduate college. I had debated over going into the research field for clinical psychology. My career took a different path before I ended up in research. In an attempt to get a decent job, I handed out resumes as a college senior to businesses all over the local area and managed to land a gig working as an executive assistant for a fairly prestigious law firm. After appreciating the ins and outs of legal work so much, I decided to apply to law college. SIx years later and I’m a licensed and practicing family and estate law attorney. Although I became a lawyer, psychology and sociology are still interests of mine. Through reading scientific journals, I try to remain updated and knowledgeable in both research fields. In the last couple of years the literature on the therapeutic benefits of medical marijuana has been impressive and far reaching. There is a flood of positive data proving that cannabis has unrealized potential medical benefits. When medical marijuana was limited to use in only a handful of states, the peer reviewed research was insufficient because the DEA was slow and reluctant in studying cannabis for medical uses. Now that cannabis is available not only medically but recreationally in many states, marijuana’s scientific research is finally getting priority status. I tell people all the time that they should consider cannabis as a legitimate medicine. It provides so many beneficial medical treatments. The research is ongoing and still insufficient but so promising. It’s exciting to learn how this natural remedy helps with so many severe problems with the human body.

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