A caregiver is a qualified person who assists a registered medical cannabis patient. Caregivers help their assigned patients with various things, including cultivating cannabis at home, purchasing cannabis from dispensaries, and dosing cannabis for the patient’s medical needs. Elderly and minor patients are the most common types of patients to have caregivers, but caregivers can be helpful for anyone with a debilitating condition or other barriers to access (e.g., no driver’s license). The qualifications for becoming a caregiver vary by state.
Megan’s caregiver tends to her home cannabis garden.
Learn more about caregivers here.
Cannabis science is one of the fastest moving frontiers medicinal sciences in the world. The pharmacology behind it has been accelerated by the realization that we’re all already marinated in cannabis-like molecules (endocannabinoids) and their receptors.
Endocannabinoids help regulate many physiological processes such as your mood, memory, appetite, pain, immune function, metabolism, and bone growth to name a few. Consuming cannabis also modulates this endocannabinoid system in many ways. The effects can be benevolent, although sometimes problematic.
Understanding the science behind cannabis is a key factor in being able to fully enjoy its medicinal value.
People have been using cannabis as medicine for thousands of years. The plant has also been widely used clothing, fuel, food, fiber, and medicine.
Cannabis contains more than 120 different cannabinoid molecules. But, as far as we know, only one gets you high: THC. The plant itself contains a huge amount of cerebral, non-intoxicating THC cousins with emerging medicinal potential. Their abbreviated names are often: CBD, CBG, THC-V, CBC, and CBN to mention a few.
Data Last Updated 06/05/2023