Missouri Police Search for Marijuana in a Stage 4 Cancer Patient's Hospital Room

Tara Law, writing for TIME:

A stage 4 pancreatic cancer patient says he feels his rights have been violated after police search his hospital room for marijuana in a video that has since been viewed more than 500,000 times on Facebook.

In the clip, which was first streamed on Facebook Live on Thursday, a pair of police officers search bags that belong to Nolan Sousley, a patient with pancreatic cancer who was hospitalized in Missouri.

Sousley tells them that all he has are pills containing THC, which he says is to treat his cancer. The officers claim that they have been tipped off that there was a marijuana smell coming from Sousley’s room.

The dude is literally dying from stage 4 pancreatic cancer. A sane society would let him have as much cannabis as he wants and leave him in peace. Instead, these cops tore through his room looking for weed. And to top it all off?:

The officers did not find anything illegal in the room.

Just try to watch the video without your blood starting to boil.


This Week in Psychoactives - 3.8.19

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CANNABIS

  • Bipartisan Legislation To End Marijuana Prohibition Filed (NORML)

  • As of 2019, Legal Cannabis Has Created 211,000 Full-Time Jobs in America (Leafly)

  • Marijuana Decriminalization Bill Passes New Mexico Senate (Marijuana Moment)

  • New Mexico House Passes Marijuana Legalization Bill (Marijuana Moment)

  • Hawaii Lawmakers Approve Marijuana Decriminalization Bill (Marijuana Moment)

  • Trump Administration Wants More Input On Marijuana Rescheduling (Forbes)

  • North Dakota’s First Medical Cannabis Dispensary Is Open for Business (Leafly)

  • Elon Musk Could Lose His Pentagon Security Clearance Over Video of Him Smoking Pot (TIME)

  • Higher education: Colleges add cannabis to the curriculum (AP News)

  • Liberal Hawaii Decides Again Not to Legalize Cannabis (Leafly)

  • Cannabis conundrum: California researchers struggling to get their hands on it (The Mercury News)

  • Why scientists are using yeast to make marijuana compounds (The Verge)

  • Amazon Vet Joins Cannabis Site Leafly As New CEO (Forbes)

  • Majority Of Americans Support Legalizing Marijuana And Expunging Records, Poll Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • Hawaii Dispensaries Can Now Serve Out-of-State Cannabis Patients (Leafly)

  • Marijuana Use Before Sex Leads To More Satisfying Orgasms, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • Regulations Are Choking Out California's Legal Weed Industry (VICE)

  • Bernie Sanders Hits Campaign Trail With A Big Focus On Marijuana Reform (Marijuana Moment)

  • Beto O’Rourke Rallies Support Around Marijuana Reform Ahead Of Potential 2020 Run (Marijuana Moment)

  • Where Presidential Candidate John Hickenlooper Stands On Marijuana (Marijuana Moment)

  • Where Presidential Candidate Jay Inslee Stands On Marijuana (Marijuana Moment)

  • How I Use CBD to Treat Endometriosis (Civilized)

  • Texas Lawmakers Hold Marijuana Decriminalization Hearing (Marijuana Moment)

  • Texas Sheriffs Stand Against Marijuana Policy Reform (The Appeal)

  • The DEA Wants Help Differentiating Marijuana From Hemp (Marijuana Moment)

  • Facebook May Loosen Marijuana Restrictions, Internal Company Presentation Says (Marijuana Moment)

  • Guns or cannabis? Ohio patients must choose. (Cincinnati.com)

  • South Africa's Cannabis Policy is Wildly Confusing, Despite "Dagga" Being Part of the Culture for Centuries (Civilized)

  • Florida Poised to Repeal State Ban on Smokable Cannabis (Leafly)

  • Massachusetts dogs suffering from “cannabis toxicity” now that pot is legal (The Takeout)

  • Meghan McCain Says Marijuana Might Have Extended Her Father’s Life (Marijuana Moment)

  • Boulder company conducting study on effects of CBD on brain injury (Boulder Daily Camera)

  • Where Do The Major North American Sports Leagues Stand On Cannabis? (Yahoo! Sports)

LSD

  • Stanford admissions employee charged in LSD stabbing of girlfriend (Los Angeles Times)

  • How LSD Makes Us Trip, and Why It Might Be Good for Us (Esquire)

  • Taking LSD every morning ‘could be beneficial’, say scientists (Metro)

  • Gaspar Noé provokes again, this time with LSD as lubricant, in 'Climax' (The Boston Globe)

  • This sailor brought acid aboard his carrier (Navy Times)

MAGIC MUSHROOMS

  • A single dose of psilocybin enhances creative thinking and empathy up to seven days after use, study finds (PsyPost)

  • B.C. counsellor wants Health Canada to approve psilocybin to treat death anxiety (Vancouver Sun)

MDMA

  • Israeli approves compassionate use of MDMA to treat PTSD patients (420 Intel)

  • MDMA is purer, more readily available than ever in New Zealand (Newshub)

  • Man died plunging into Amsterdam canal after taking MDMA (Rave Jungle)

  • Schoolgirl, 15, collapsed and died on first day of summer holidays after experimenting with ecstasy (The Sun)

DMT

  • Scientists Microdosed Rats With DMT, and It Was Both Good and "Concerning" (Inverse)

  • The DMT Trip and the Mysteries of Hyperspace Travel (Chacruna)

  • Meet the real-life people probing one part of an Alex Jones DMT conspiracy theory (Rooster Magazine)

AYAHUASCA

  • Ritualistic ayahuasca users tend to have positive health and psychosocial well-being (PsyPost)

  • Six Playful Lessons from a Transgender Journey Through Ayahuasca Integration (Chacruna)

  • Shipibo Women Healers on the Challenges and Opportunities of the Ayahuasca Boom (Psymposia)

  • What I Learned During 15 Years as an Ayahuasca Scientist (Kahpi)

5-MEO-DMT

  • 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeO-DMT) used in a naturalistic group setting is associated with unintended improvements in depression and anxiety (Taylor and Francis Online)

SALVIA DIVINORUM

  • What It’s Like to Smoke Salvia for Science (Motherboard)

NOVEL PSYCHOACTIVE SUBSTANCES

  • 2C-B Is the Drug Taking Over the UK's Clubs (VICE)

  • What is party drug 2CP and what are the side-effects after first UK death? (Metro)

  • Examining the Tragic Bestival Drug Death of Louella Fletcher-Michie (VICE)

SYNTHETIC CANNABINOIDS

  • Synthetic cannabinoid use can affect psychological outcomes (Healio)

  • Government moves to increase synthetic cannabinoids penalties (Radio New Zealand)

  • Spice ‘zombies’ triggering NHS cost crisis (Metro)

NITROUS OXIDE

  • Boca Regional Offering Nitrous Oxide Therapy For Patients In Childbirth (Boca Newspaper)

  • Why ‘nos’, the nitrous oxide party drug, is no laughing matter (The Times)

KETAMINE

  • A ketamine-like drug is the first new antidepressant to get FDA approval in years (Vox)

  • Esketamine is not a breakthrough new drug: Why the nasal spray for depression is old news (KevinMD.com)

  • How Is Taking Ketamine for Depression Different From Falling Into a K-Hole? (Gizmodo)

  • Driver high on ketamine ploughed into woman walking in Kings Heath (Birmingham Live)

PCP

OPIATES/OPIOIDS

  • Maryland to distribute fentanyl test strips to allow users to test drugs (The Baltimore Sun)

  • How One Group Is Expanding Access to Overdose-Reversing Drugs Through the Mail  (Tonic)

  • French poppy seed bread found to contain dangerous levels of morphine (The Telegraph)

  • Good News: Opioid Prescribing Fell. The Bad? Pain Patients Suffer, Doctors Say. (The New York Times)

  • Investigation: Where Are Naloxone Confiscations Happening the Most? (Filter)

  • 'Opium-addicted' parrots terrorize Indian poppy farmers (The Jerusalem Post)

  • The Opioid Dilemma: Saving Lives in the Long Run Can Take Lives in the Short Run (The New York Times)

  • Naloxone kits will be added to 29 city-owned public buildings (CBC)

  • Staten Island nonprofit will include naloxone training in CPR classes (SILive.com)

  • Naloxone credited with decrease in overdose reports in Lima region (Lima Ohio)

  • Scott Gottlieb was one of the few Trump officials taking on the opioid crisis. Now he’s out. (Vox)

  • Fulton commission considering ban on synthetic opioids (MDJOnline.com)

  • Report: Man overdosing on heroin crashes into restaurant (News 12 Westchester)

  • Saira Khan: Stop doctors creating a nation of addicts (Mirror)

  • Charges dropped in historic opium poppy bust in Catawba County (WCNC)

  • Why aren’t slots for opioid treatment filled? City tries to turn the tide. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • Training Day: Naloxone indications and administration (EMS1.com)

  • Naloxone saves lives and experts say it's easier to get than most people think (9News.com)

COCAINE

  • Insta-gram: How British cocaine dealers got faster and better (Mixmag)

METHAMPHETAMINE

  • Local dentists show dangers of meth (KRQE)

ALCOHOL

  • Alcohol Reduces Fibromyalgia Pain (Pain News Network)

  • Why You Can't Buy Alcohol on Election Days in Some Countries (VinePair)

  • Drinking Alcohol Is More Harmful To Young People Than Previously Thought, According To Study (Bustle)

  • Push to allow more alcohol in Utah beer hits stumbling block (Standard-Examiner)

  • Locals reflect on first year of having Sunday alcohol sales (WTHI-TV)

  • Is It More Difficult for Women to Quit Drinking Alcohol? (The Bold Italic)

  • More than a dozen Clayton businesses caught selling alcohol to minors (WRAL)

KRATOM

  • Kratom recalled after salmonella bacteria found in products sold by Oregon company (Statesman Journal)

  • Chester County family sues kratom distributor in death of son (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • US Poison Control Is Being Inundated With Calls About an Opioid-Like Herb (ScienceAlert)

  • Two Parents' Kratom Stories: One Nightmare, One Miracle (Westword)

  • Monroe County sheriff to ask for banning of Kratom (WCBI)

MISCELLANEOUS

  • Psychedelics and Dying Care: A Historical Look at the Relationship between Psychedelics and Palliative Care (Taylor and Francis Online)

  • The IRS Targets Drug Policy Reformers (Reason)

  • Gwyneth Paltrow thinks psychedelics are the next big wellness trend (Quartz)

  • Labour supports trials of consumption rooms to cut drug deaths (The Guardian)

  • “Never Give Up”—State Commission Urges Mass. to Move for Supervised Consumption Sites (Filter)

  • Leaving The Third Wave: Team Statement (The Psychedelic Scientist)

  • Reframing Psychedelic Integration into a Continuum with Community (Psychedelic Support)

  • Alex Jones Says Secret Government Program Uses Psychedelics To Communicate With Aliens (Marijuana Moment)

  • Can We Quantify the Placebo Effect in Psychedelic Medicine? (Psychedelic Support)

  • Wavepaths Conversations — Jon Hopkins (Medium)

  • Record Number in US Dying From Alcohol, Drugs, Suicide (Newsmax)

  • Teens Need the Truth About Drugs (The Wall Street Journal)

  • Male drug-related deaths up 98% in Northern Ireland (BBC)

  • Yale researchers bolster conversations on psychedelic science (Yale Daily News)

  • Could Microdosing Psychedelics Treat Mood Disorders? (The Fix)

  • Psychedelic Drugs Heal, Too (Washington Square News)


On the Monday following each edition of “This Week in Psychoactives,” I post a “Last Week in Psychoactives” video recap to my YouTube channel. After that is done, I retroactively add the video to the corresponding blog post. Here is this week’s video recap:


Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychoactives" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

Bipartisan Legislation To End Marijuana Prohibition Filed

NORML:

Representatives Tulsi Gabbard (HI-02) and Don Young (AK-AL) introduced today two landmark bipartisan marijuana bills.

Introduced was The Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Act of 2019, to remove marijuana from the federal Controlled Substances list and allow states the freedom to regulate marijuana as they choose, without federal interference.

This would deschedule cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act and put a stop to federal prohibition, but it wouldn’t legalize it in the sense of creating a legal and regulated market. The next would begin the collection of data on the efficacy of state legalized and medicinal cannabis programs.

Also introduced was The Marijuana Data Collection Act of 2019, which would study the effects of state legalized medicinal and non-medicinal marijuana programs from a variety of perspectives, including state revenues, public health, substance abuse and opioids, criminal justice, and employment.

In other words, these two bills would get the federal government’s hands out of cannabis once and for all and also kickstart the process of learning more about what is working (and what isn’t) in medical and recreational states.


A Ketamine-Like Drug Is the First New Antidepressant to Get FDA Approval in Years

Julia Belluz, writing for Vox:

Ketamine, which has long been used as an anesthetic, has increasingly been tried off-label by psychiatrists as a last-ditch effort to treat the 12 to 20 percent of adults with depression who don’t respond to other antidepressant medications or treatments.

Building on years of preliminary research about ketamine’s potential benefits for depression, Johnson & Johnson developed a drug called esketamine, sold under the brand name Spravato. The nasal spray is designed to alleviate depressive symptoms within hours — much faster than the other antidepressants on the market, such as Prozac, which can take weeks or months to act.

In February, an FDA panel determined, in a 14-2 vote, that esketamine’s benefits outweigh its risks and recommended that the agency approve the drug. The approval came on Tuesday, the first new antidepressant type to be greenlit by the agency in decades.

At first glance this may sound like good news, but weekly supervised administrations of esketamine will only be available for:

  1. Adults suffering from treatment-resistant depression,

  2. Who are also taking another oral anti-depressant, and

  3. Have access to a certified clinic where patients can be monitored for two hours after taking the drug.

Oh, and it’s going to be prohibitively expensive for most. While street ketamine is relatively expensive (typically $70-100 per gram), these nasal spray esketamine treatments will cost patients “anywhere between $2,360 to $2,540 a month.”

And the controversy doesn’t end there, either. Some physicians like psychiatrist Erik Messamore have a few problems with this news:

We’ve known since at least 2006 that ketamine (old, cheap, generic ketamine) rapidly shrink depressive symptoms. The antidepressant response occurs in a matter of hours and can last for up to a week after a single dose. […]

We didn’t need eskatamine, really. We just needed a way to get 2006 medical science discoveries into clinical practice in less than 13 years. […]

-Without FDA approval, insurance companies will find a convenient excuse not to cover treatments – even if medical science shows that the treatment is useful.

-Only pharmaceutical companies have enough money to get the FDA to look at data and opine on effectiveness.

-Pharmaceutical companies won’t spend a dime to ask the FDA to review generic drugs like ketamine (or natural products like fish oil)

-We do not have organizations [that] are reliably willing to review non-industry-sponsored science and make recommendations about when a generic drug or natural product should move into clinical practice.

Similar issues are emerging in the psilocybin space right now too. In the midst of all the excitement with psychedelic drugs being medicalized, we should remain aware of the potential problems we face with only allowing certain populations of people have access to these tools—and with letting Big Pharma reap all of the profits that should instead be going toward the brave people who belong to a movement the industry has fiercely attempted to stave off for decades.


Marijuana Use Before Sex Leads to More Satisfying Orgasms, Study Finds

Kimberly Lawson, writing for Marijuana Moment:

Want a more satisfying time in the bedroom? A quick toke or two may do the trick, according to a new study in the journal Sexual Medicine.

While scientific evidence about the effects of marijuana use on sexual functioning is limited, there’s plenty of anecdotal claims online about cannabis improving libido, arousal and orgasm. So researchers decided to investigate, publishing one of the largest studies on the issue to date.

After reading the title of this post, you’re probably thinking to yourself, “…no duh.” Well, the results may not be all that surprising, but this is really intriguing research. There’s still plenty more to learn about how cannabis affects sex, but preliminary studies like this one are laying the foundation that is needed to even get around to performing more rigorous research.