MARINETTE — Perhaps a parent's worst fear: That their children will not succeed in life. Now add to that fear the growing risk that they could develop lifelong symptoms of schizophrenia from marijuana ...
The fact that a slightly less harmful drug is even easier to obtain and use shouldn’t be held up as a blueprint for future ...
As a psychiatrist and addiction medicine physician, I am surprised that some patients and their families still believe marijuana is a benign and innocuous substance. Over the past several years, I ...
"I think this whole thing can be laid at the door of the defendant's intentional and purposeful substance abuse," a ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. LOS ANGELES – Lawyers representing twin ...
HONOLULU (Island News) -- An Oahu psychiatrist says there's an increase in marijuana psychosis in young people. Dr. Gerald Busch worked with psychiatric patients at a Honolulu hospital where he says ...
The $38 billion cannabis industry is booming, but one neuroscientist is warning that today’s marijuana may carry deadly risks, especially for young people. Dr. Kristen Gilliland, a Vanderbilt ...
A lawsuit alleging deceptive marketing against a California cannabis brand for failing to warn about the increased risk of cannabis-induced psychosis is considered the first of its kind. The lawsuit ...
WJW: Susan Hatters-Friedman, the Phillip Resnick Professor of Forensic Psychiatry and an adjunct professor at the School of Law, discussed the risks of cannabis-induced psychosis. She explained that ...
*Twin sisters have filed a lawsuit against the LA-based cannabis brand Stiiizy, alleging that its products are contributing to a rise in cannabis-induced psychosis, particularly among California’s ...
Samuel Yeager began consuming marijuana after he turned 15. At only 23, he was dead — killed in an armed standoff with authorities. Yeager was dropped off alongside Interstate 25 during what his ...
By Greg Schaller Thirteen years after Colorado became one of the first two states to legalize recreational marijuana, the verdict is in: it has been a public policy failure of historic proportions.