Men\'s Health UK - 10.2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
MEN’S HEALTH 83

HHHighh Tiiimmes


03 04

01 02

MMMikeee Tyyssoonnn
In 2016, he founded
Ty s o n H o l i s t i c
Holdings, which sells
premium strains and
edibles. He’s building
a 400-acre resort with
the world’s longest
lazy river. He also has
a podcast: Hotboxin’
with Mike Tyson.

GGGwwyyyneetthh Paaalttrooww
Paltrow welcomed
marijuana dispensary
chain MedMen into
her empire with a
Goop collaboration
last year. Goop also
hosts articles on CBD
dinner parties and
stylish cannabis
flower gift boxes.

JJooe MMoonnttannna
The Hall of Fame NFL
quarterback invested
in cannabis-focused
media outlet Herb
in 2017. This year,
he was part of a
$75m investment
in Caliva: a marijuana
dispensary behemoth
based in California.

DDDaan Billzzeeriaaann
The self-proclaimed
King of Instagram
co-founded the
cannabis company
Ignite. His goal?
To “create the first
global cannabis
brand” that becomes
“the Coca-Cola of
the weed industry”.

in perceptions of cannabis “baffling” and
“annoying”. “There’s some evidence that
cannabis helps with a few indications,”
he says. “But then you hear rubbish about
CBD curing cancer or treating depression.
The idea that you should give cannabis
to people with PTSD is fanciful.”
Meanwhile, the American journalist
Alex Berenson has been trying to draw
attention to the links between cannabis
and psychosis. His book, Tell Your
Children, argues that the cannabis lobby
ignored evidence that THC can help to
bring about schizophrenia. He cites a
2017 study, which found: “Cannabis use
is likely to increase the risk of developing
schizophrenia and other psychoses. The
higher the use, the greater the risk.”
Berenson’s book has been dismissed
as alarmist by many researchers, but he
is not wrong to caution that THC has its
risks. “There’s reason to be careful,” says
Lawn. “If you smoke skunk every day, the
risk of psychosis goes from 0.5% to 2.5%.
That’s a big increase. But we should keep
that in perspective. You’ve still got a 97.5%
chance of being OK.” Lawn sees excesses


on both sides, but he views it as “bizarre”
that even where cannabis is legalised, it
hasn’t been subject to basic regulations.
There are whole libraries of evidence
that alcohol is harmful, for example, and
many scientists would argue that it’s more
damaging than cannabis. Alcohol is legal,
but there are rules about how you can sell
it. It’s licensed. There are restrictions on
advertising, warnings on abuse. You won’t
find many people using their social media
platforms to tell you Jägermeister is good
for cramps, or that gin cures psoriasis.
“In the UK, the wellness angle is mainly
focused on CBD, which is harmless,”
Lawn says. “But in the US, the marketing
is strong for the use of high-strength
cannabis. That’s distasteful. We’ve
stopped tobacco adverts on TV. I don’t
like seeing gambling adverts and alcohol
adverts. Why go down that road again?”
Cannabis companies might not be able
to market these products in the UK yet,
but they are making their presence felt.
Instagram celebrity Dan Bilzerian set up
shop here in July with his brand Ignite,
while medicinal company Aurora urged
the UK to be a “leader, not a laggard”.

Those advocating for cannabis
reform will argue that the comparative
paucity of evidence-based research is
merely a symptom of how excessive the
anti-cannabis mood has been over the
years. Cannabinoids are of interest to
medical science, as are many restricted
drugs – diamorphine (heroin) is routinely
used as a pain-relief agent; ketamine is
sometimes used as an anaesthetic – but
restrictive drug laws have made it hard to
run the sort of randomised, double-blind
clinical trials that would give us the data
to prove cannabis’s efficacy.
Badcock of DrugScience argues that
this shouldn’t be an obstruction. “The
cannabis plant is a very complex thing. It
would take years to do all the trials you’d
need to understand it,” he says. “We can’t
wait for that. The evidence suggests it’s
less harmful than the government regards
it and how it’s depicted in the media.”
One of the problems for doctors is
knowing how to prescribe cannabis. In
what form? In what dosage? No responsible
doctor wants to encourage their patients
to start skinning up Purple Haze. But as

THE MARIJUANA MOGULS


The “cannabiz” is thriving, and it’s not
just Snoop Dogg buying in. Here’s
a roll call of the more familiar faces

THE PROPORTION OF BRITISH
ADULTS WHO NOW WANT TO
LEGALISE CANNABIS
Free download pdf