Religion

Cannabis Use for Medicinal Purposes is No New Phenomenon

Article Title:

Cannabis sativa: A comprehensive ethnopharmacological review of a medicinal plant with a long history

In Summary:

Although medical cannabis has only lately become more popularized, its use dates back to as early as 3,000-10,000 B.C. According to evidence in ancient texts and glyphs, Cannabis sativa was used to treat fatigue, rheumatism, and malaria, as well as numerous other common maladies. Around 60 B.C., Assyrian clay tablets and Egyptian Ebers Papyrus document ancient Egyptian women using C. sativa for pain management and to improve their mood. More recently, nineteenth-century English doctors prescribed cannabis to reduce pain, inflammation, nausea, and seizures, and to soothe difficulties of menstruation. In a shock to the human historical trend, both England and the United States moved to prohibit its use in the 1930s, creating steep barriers for its therapeutic use, and an enduring smokescreen for the memory of its historical continuity.

Dr. Caplan and the #MDTake:

The history of cannabis use is often shocking to modern consumers, who have grown up hearing the biased views of the 20th-century leaders. A testament to the powerful reach of political propaganda, even medical schools adopted the rhetoric of the age, without second-guessing. Fortunately, the march of oral history and social spread of cannabis use perpetuated a very different, much less menacing tale. Now, it is time for the sophistication of modern medicine to catch up and lift cannabis understanding and consumption to modern medical standards.

History of Cannabis YouTube playlist: bit.ly/CEDCannabisHistory

View this review (yellow link) or download:

This paper is also stored here:    http://bit.ly/2OtLmC9     inside the CED Foundation Archive

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Benjamin Caplan, MDCannabis Use for Medicinal Purposes is No New Phenomenon
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