Cannabis sativa and the Truth Be Told Good Rese
Post# of 85497
Good Research = Good Outcomes
Telling the truth is easy, only if you know what you just said is true. What you know is easy, what you do not know, you do not know and might call for something called conjecture. Conjecture! What is conjecture? Conjecture is an opinion or conclusion formed on the basis of incomplete information.
The world of science has many conjectures which are used to formulate a strategy, a formula and/or treatment course for a medical disorder.
Case in point: When I went to medical school, the cause of the duodenal ulcers was conjected to be the hypersecretion of hydrochloric acid. It took fifty years and a young Australian doctor to drink swamp water before he could get the powers that be to consider a new idea of a new mechanism for ulcer formation. By the way, that young man won the Nobel Prize for Medicine for clearing up that conjecture.
Around that same time, in my early days of medical school, a conjecture was made by a non-scientific body that Cannabis sativa was a gateway drug, addictive and had no medical purpose and should be scheduled as a dangerous drug consistent with cocaine and heroin. Subsequently, this plant-based medicine was labeled a Schedule 1drug and American’s number one enemy.
Cannabis sativa and the Truth Be Told
Good Research = Good Outcomes
Telling the truth is easy, only if you know what you just said is true. What you know is easy, what you do not know, you do not know and might call for something called conjecture. Conjecture! What is conjecture? Conjecture is an opinion or conclusion formed on the basis of incomplete information.
The world of science has many conjectures which are used to formulate a strategy, a formula and/or treatment course for a medical disorder.
Case in point: When I went to medical school, the cause of the duodenal ulcers was conjected to be the hypersecretion of hydrochloric acid. It took fifty years and a young Australian doctor to drink swamp water before he could get the powers that be to consider a new idea of a new mechanism for ulcer formation. By the way, that young man won the Nobel Prize for Medicine for clearing up that conjecture.
Around that same time, in my early days of medical school, a conjecture was made by a non-scientific body that Cannabis sativa was a gateway drug, addictive and had no medical purpose and should be scheduled as a dangerous drug consistent with cocaine and heroin. Subsequently, this plant-based medicine was labeled a Schedule 1drug and American’s number one enemy.
The solution for HCI is to determine the baseline studies that need to be done for patient safety. It is imperative that we understand the absorption, the rate of metabolism and the elimination of this Cannabis sativa medicine; as it is done for every other medicine before it is released to the public. In this case of Cannabis sativa, the inverse relationship for patient safety was obstructed by the judicial overreach outlined.
Studies from around the world show great innovation and promise for Cannabis sativa to be a 21st Century enlightenment if we give it good research and validate many of the results which already populate global research on this age-old plant.
The call for validation studies will lead to new opportunities once the safety questions are answered. Only then can HCI’s next objective be met whereby we can learn how to maximize the cannabinoids and their interaction with different terpenes with different disease models. The best is yet to come!
Eric I. Mitchell, MD MA FACPE CPE
Chief Executive Officer
Hemp Commodity Industries, LLC