Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Virginia Republicans Delay Legal Pot Sales
A Virginia House of Delegates subcommittee on Monday killed efforts to accelerate recreational marijuana sales in the state, leaving its budding cannabis industry in limbo for at least another year. The GOP-controlled House panel voted along party lines to float a nearly 200-page bill until next year鈥檚 legislative session. The bill had become this year鈥檚 vehicle for nearly all marijuana-related measures, outlining everything from enforcement and regulation to tax revenue and reinvestment. (Elwood, 2/28)
In other news about marijuana and CBD 鈥
So far, 14 states and Washington, D.C., have banned employers from discriminating against workers who use marijuana for medical reasons. New Jersey and New York ban employers from discriminating against workers who legally use marijuana medically or recreationally. And Nevada bans employers from refusing to hire someone solely because they fail a marijuana test. The laws generally make exceptions for certain employers and occupations. But bills have stumbled elsewhere because of opposition from business groups and disagreements over how to measure marijuana intoxication. A bill filed in Washington state this session already has been tabled. A California bill faces an uphill battle. And, in light of opposition, a Colorado bill will be softened to studying the issue. (Quinton, 2/28)
Legalized medical marijuana in its purest form, dried flower, is now for sale in Minnesota. Starting Tuesday, March 1, everyone who is registered for medical marijuana use can apply to obtain flower. But a few patients who were already vetted got their hands on some of Minnesota's first legal bud. (Molmud, 2/28)
Anti-cannabis lawmakers at the state Capitol have thwarted momentum building toward legal marijuana in South Dakota. And the same committee in the South Dakota Legislature that killed a proposal to legalize recreational pot use for adults Monday also advanced a separate measure that repeals portions of the medical marijuana law adopted by voters in 2020."The provisions that past in IM26 were just a backdoor way to recreational marijuana," said Rep. David Anderson, R-Hudson. (Sneve, 2/28)
OnPoint, a laboratory that tests marijuana in Arizona, has been fined nearly a half-million dollars for repeated violations. OnPoint Laboratory reached the agreement after the state threatened to pull the lab鈥檚 certification. Inspections show violations go back to September 2020. A report prepared by the Arizona Department of Health Services (AZDHS) states deficiencies and violations were 鈥渃ommitted intentionally鈥 and 鈥渁re a risk to the health, safety, and welfare of the public and medical marijuana qualifying patients.鈥 (Pickel, 2/28)
Some 80% of parents say they know little to nothing about CBD products, according to a new poll by C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health at the University of Michigan Health. The term CBD stands for cannabidiol, a chemical compound found in marijuana and hemp, the report said. Unlike marijuana, CBD only has 0.3% of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. The THC is the psychoactive part of marijuana that makes people feel high. Of the 7% of parents who gave or considered giving a CBD product to their child, only 29% said they talked with their child's pediatrician about using it. Of the 1,992 parents polled nationwide, 35% thought CBD and marijuana are more or less the same thing. The parents had children who ranged from newborns to 18 years old. (Marples, 3/1)
In news about the opioid crisis 鈥
Ryan Hayes came into Mount Carmel Health System's intensive care unit in April 2017 with swelling in his brain after overdosing at home.聽Then, a medical expert testified Monday, Dr. William Husel gave Hayes, who was 39, 1,000 micrograms of fentanyl,聽enough of the powerful opiate聽"to take out an elephant."聽Thirty-three minutes after that medication was given, Hayes was dead. And the medication is what killed him, Dr. Wes Ely, of Vanderbilt University, testified on Monday. (Bruner, 2/28)