21
Mar
Esquire Theme by Matthew Buchanan
Social icons by Tim van Damme
23
Jan
(Source: torture-me-this-way)
17
Jan
(Source: ten-eleven)
iPhone 4 GIVEAWAY
- RULES
- MUST BE FOLLOWING c-h-e-s-h-i-r-e-c-a-t
- if you’re not following me I will choose someone else
- reblogs only, likes don’t count
- reblog as many times as you want for a higher chance
- this is real.. if you think it’s fake then don’t reblog
- you have until February 1st (may change to a later date)
- I will message the winner, you have 24 hours to reply
- I will ship anywhere
- 32 GB in size
- you have to get your own SIM card
- I will choose using random.org
Good luck! :) x
(Source: sirenss)
16
Jan
(Source: afterthesmoke)
(Source: fightforthe28th)
(Source: hydrotoxicity)
Physicians who prescribe opioid drugs to patients with neuropathy (nerve pain) ought to consider recommending cannabis as an alternative therapy, according to a peer-reviewed paper published online this week in the Harm Reduction Journal.
“There is sufficient evidence of safety and efficacy for the use of (cannabis/cannabinoids) in the treatment of nerve pain relative to opioids,” the commentary states. “In states where medicinal cannabis is legal, physicians who treat neuropathic pain with opioids should evaluate their patients for a trial of cannabis and prescribe it when appropriate prior to using opioids. … Prescribing cannabis in place of opioids for neuropathic pain may reduce the morbidity and mortality rates associated with prescription pain medications and may be an effective harm reduction strategy.”
The author notes that between the years 1999 and 2006, “approximately 65,000 people died from opioid analgesic overdose.” By contrast, he writes “[N]o one has ever died from an overdose of cannabis.”
In clinical trials, inhaled cannabis has been consistently shown to reduce neuropathic pain of diverse causes in subjects unresponsive to standard pain therapies.