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Medical Use of Cannabis
Medical Use of Cannabis
This film explains the medical use and working of the Cannabis Sativa plant, also known as marijuana or hemp. Scientists, patients, a family doctor, a pharmacist, an anesthetist and a medicinal Cannabis producer, give their views on this versatile plant and its medicinal effects.

40 min 1 sec - Jan 8, 2007. Click image to view.
Source: www.maripharm.nl


Medical Marijuana pro/con
This Web site is an excellent resource on the medical use of marijuana, presenting, in an unbiased, primarily pro/con format, responses to the related and core question; "Should marijuana be a medical option now?" Here you can find information on the medical value and use of marijuana, the medical risks of use, diseases and conditions in which marijuana is used, U.S. government policies and medical marijuana, legal issues, and non-smoked marijuana. There's also a fascinating section that provides a three-part overview of the history of marijuana as medicine, from 2737 B.C. to the present.

Hemp TV is one of the largest archives of hemp-related videos on the Web. Please make a donation to help this resource and to help change cannabis laws in the United States, and the world.

Harvest of hemp as a biogas substrate


Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base - National Academy of Sciences

For thousands of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of ailments. Until 1937, marijuana (Cannabis sativa L.) was legal in the United States for all purposes.

Marijuana is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known. No one has ever died from an overdose, and it has a wide variety of therapeutic applications, including:

  • Relief from nausea and appetite loss;
  • Reduction of intraocular (within the eye) pressure;
  • Reduction of muscle spasms; and
  • Relief from chronic pain.

Marijuana is frequently beneficial in the treatment of the following conditions:

AIDS. Marijuana can reduce the nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite caused by the ailment itself and by various AIDS medications.

Glaucoma. Marijuana can reduce intraocular pressure, alleviating the pain and slowing and sometimes stopping damage to the eyes. (Glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness in the United States. It damages vision by increasing eye pressure over time.)

Cancer. Marijuana can stimulate the appetite and alleviate nausea and vomiting, which are common side effects of chemotherapy treatment.

Multiple Sclerosis. Marijuana can limit the muscle pain and spasticity caused by the disease, as well as relieving tremor and unsteadiness of gait. (Multiple sclerosis is the leading cause of neurological disability among young and middle-aged adults in the United States.)

Epilepsy. Marijuana can prevent epileptic seizures in some patients.

Chronic Pain. Marijuana can alleviate the chronic, often debilitating pain caused by myriad disorders and injuries. Each of these applications has been deemed legitimate by at least one court, legislature, and/or government agency in the United States.


US Marijuana Arrests 1965-2006

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Please visit our our 501(c)(3) non-profit medical marijuana clinics at:
The Hemp & Cannabis Foundation


Benjamin Franklin
started one of
America's first paper
mills with cannabis,
allowing a colonial press
free from English control.



Hemp is Legal
in many countries
throughout Europe
and Asia, including the
United Kingdom, the
Netherlands, and China.



Hemp is of
first necessity to
the wealth & protection
of the country.
Thomas Jefferson



Indian Hemp
was properly christened
by Linnaeus, in 1753,
as Cannabis sativa,
which remains the
botanical name for the
plant species.



The U.S. Government
distributed 400,000 pounds of cannabis seeds to American farmers in 1942 to aid the war effort.












Let's restore our right to
grow this resourceful crop!



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All material included herein is provided free of charge for political and educational purposes under the US federal "Fair Use Doctrine." This material may only be used for political and educational purposes without written consent.