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Are Borderland residents substituting alcohol for marijuana? New studies show daily marijuana users...
ABC 7 El Paso· 3 days agoABC-7 spoke to Borderland residents to see how the legalization of marijuana in places like New...
Teens who use marijuana are more likely to suffer psychotic disorders, study finds
NBC News via Yahoo News· 4 days agoTeenagers who used cannabis within the last year had a dramatically higher rate of developing a...
Daily marijuana use outpaces daily drinking in the US, a new study says
The Bryan-College Station Eagle· 4 days agoMillions of people in the U.S. report using marijuana daily or nearly every day, according to survey...
Cannabis is in and alcohol is out. Is Gen Z driving the change?
CBS News via Yahoo News· 3 days agoReiff points to a recent National Institute of Health study that associates schizophrenia with...
Does Legalizing Cannabis Increase Adolescent Use? This Expert Found Mixed Results.
New York Times· 6 days agoTwenty-four states and the District of Columbia have now legalized the sale of marijuana for...
‘I really thought I was going to prison’: Woman who killed man during marijuana-induced psychosis...
WJZY via Yahoo News· 3 days ago“We did recover the only source of marijuana at the scene and it was tested and it was not...
Cannabis Legalization: 22M US Teenagers Are Less Interested In Weed In States Where It's Legal, Go...
Benzinga· 5 days agoDespite the above list of legal access, it's worth mentioning that no teenager can get through the...
Risk for psychosis skyrockets among teens who use cannabis
United Press International via Yahoo News· 4 days agoDoctors have long known that excessive marijuana use can trigger psychosis, especially in the young....
[Infographic] DEA's Proposed Rules For Marijuana: What You Need To Know
Benzinga· 6 days agoThe Dept. of Justice (DOJ) proposes rescheduling marijuana to Schedule III under the Controlled...
MSU experts weigh-in on impacts of Marijuana reclassification
FOX 47 News Lansing· 3 days agoMarijuana currently falls under what is called a Schedule I drug, meaning it has no currently accepted medical use, and a high potential for abuse. “I think it might give ...