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Tag: marijuana edibles

  • What to do if your dog eats pot – The Cannabist

    What to do if your dog eats pot – The Cannabist

    Dogs are naturally curious animals, notorious for exploring the world by way of their mouths. So if you’re a cannabis user, it’s possible – even likely – that one day your dog will sample your stash.

    Take it from Dr. Kate Smith, medical director for Animal Urgent Care in Arvada, which gets calls about pets that have consumed pot almost every time she’s in the office.

    Sometimes, the owners aren’t aware that’s what happened. They call and report the dog seems wobbly or out of it, like a human that’s had one too many drinks. Other times, there’s evidence like an empty edibles container or a ripped baggie.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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  • Mike Tyson debuts special cannabis gummies in Colorado because he can’t sell edible ears – The Cannabist

    Mike Tyson debuts special cannabis gummies in Colorado because he can’t sell edible ears – The Cannabist

    Mike Tyson is releasing a new cannabis product exclusively for Colorado consumers, and the reason why might come as a surprise.

    Mike’s Knockout Gummies, launched Aug. 20, are THC-infused edibles shaped like little boxing gloves. They’re the first gummies the boxer has been able to sell here even if he’s had others available throughout the U.S.

    In 2022, Tyson released his first line of edibles, Mike Bites, featuring gummies shaped like ears with a missing piece of cartilage at the top – a nod to Tyson’s infamous 1997 fight against Evander Holyfield. Clever, right? Well, not according to state law.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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  • Are Edibles Safer Than Smoking? – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news

    Are Edibles Safer Than Smoking? – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news






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  • A timeline of what's happened since Colorado's first legal recreational marijuana sales began – The Cannabist

    A timeline of what's happened since Colorado's first legal recreational marijuana sales began – The Cannabist

    It’s been 10 years since Colorado launched the first legal recreational marijuana market in the world and became a pioneer in drug reform.

    But when it came to the nascent industry, the first sales on Jan. 1, 2014, were more a starting block than a finish line.

    In the decade since legalization, Colorado has refined laws, catalyzed new ones and served as a litmus test for the rest of the country as states followed its lead. Today, cannabis is recreationally available for sale in 24 states — where more than half of Americans live.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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  • Are Edibles Actually Good for Sleep? – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news

    Are Edibles Actually Good for Sleep? – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news





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  • Marijuana on the Menu: The growing trend of cannabis-infused dinner parties in Maryland – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news

    Marijuana on the Menu: The growing trend of cannabis-infused dinner parties in Maryland – Cannabis Business Executive – Cannabis and Marijuana industry news





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  • Four minority-owned marijuana manufacturers join forces under one roof – The Cannabist

    Four minority-owned marijuana manufacturers join forces under one roof – The Cannabist

    Finding a physical location to open a cannabis business in Denver is challenging. Ask local Sarah Woodson and she’ll tell you it’s among the biggest barriers to entry for new entrepreneurs.

    Woodson would know. In addition to opening Denver’s first legal marijuana tour bus company, The Cannabis Experience, she’s the founder of The Color of Cannabis, an organization that advocates for BIPOC representation in the industry. One of the pillars of her work is a 10-week course that supports social equity business applicants — people of color and other marginalized groups that were disproportionately harmed by the war on drugs — and helps them bring their ideas to life.

    Last year, while scouting potential brick-and-mortar locations with one of her class graduates, Woodson found a creative solution to one of the challenges facing cannabis entrepreneurs: A 10,000-square-foot warehouse in Montbello where multiple product manufacturers could share the space and, importantly, the rent.

    Read the rest of this story on DenverPost.com.

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  • As Popularity of Weed Edibles Rises, So Do Accidental Poisonings in Kids

    As Popularity of Weed Edibles Rises, So Do Accidental Poisonings in Kids

    By Amy Norton 

    HealthDay Reporter

    TUESDAY, Jan. 3, 2023 (HealthDay News) — As more U.S. states legalize marijuana, the number of preschoolers accidentally eating cannabis “edibles” is rising in tandem, a new study shows.

    In the past five years, U.S. poison control centers have witnessed a whopping 14-fold increase in calls about youngsters who got their hands on marijuana edibles.

    In 2017, there were just 207 cases reported nationally. By 2021, that had ballooned to over 3,000.

    None of the incidents were fatal, and many children had mild symptoms like excessive sleepiness. But 36% were treated in an emergency room, and nearly 23% had to be admitted to the hospital.

    Experts said the findings, published Jan. 3 in the journal Pediatrics, highlight a new household safety hazard.

    Marijuana edibles are not only widely available now, but come in forms like gummies and weed “candies” that young children cannot resist, said lead researcher Dr. Marit Tweet.

    “You can’t reason with a toddler, ‘Don’t eat those gummies,’” said Tweet, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine.

    According to Tweet, the most visible signs of marijuana poisoning in a youngster are often related to central nervous system depression.

    “That can mean they’re just not acting right — they’re not responding like they normally would,” she said. “Or they may be excessively sleepy. You may not be able to wake them up.”

    At the extreme end, children can develop trouble breathing or lapse into a coma.

    It all depends on size — both the child’s and the dose of THC (the active ingredient in marijuana), said Dr. Vincent Calleo, medical director of the Upstate New York Poison Center in Syracuse.

    “The dose is what makes the poison,” Calleo said. And unfortunately, he noted, marijuana edibles look like any other sweet treat to a child.

    “They’re unlikely to have the self-control to only eat one gummy, and of course they shouldn’t have any,” Calleo pointed out.

    The findings came as no surprise to Calleo, whose center is among those seeing a sharp rise in calls about child edible exposures.

    “This really does mirror what we’ve seen in upstate New York in recent years,” he said.

    Both Calleo and Tweet emphasized another point: The official numbers reflect only reports to regional poison control centers, meaning they’re almost certainly an undercount.

    “The number being reported is probably much lower than the actual number of children being exposed to edibles,” Calleo said.

    For the study, Tweet and her colleagues looked at data from all 55 regional poison control centers in the United States. They focused on figures from 2017 to 2021 — a time when marijuana laws were rapidly changing nationwide.

    At the beginning of 2017, only eight states and Washington, D.C., allowed adults to use marijuana recreationally. By May 2022, that had risen to 18 states. Meanwhile, medical marijuana use also expanded, with most U.S. states now allowing it.

    Overall, the study found, poison control centers recorded an increase of 1,375% in reports of edible exposures among children younger than 6. The majority of those kids were 2 or 3.

    Almost 15% ended up in the hospital, while another 8% fell so ill they were admitted to a critical care unit.

    Both doctors had some advice for parents or other caregivers who use edibles:

    • Store them up high and out of reach of children.
    • Consider putting them in a locked medication box.
    • Do not keep them in the kitchen, to keep kids from equating them with food.
    • Do not eat edibles in front of children.

    “I would treat these just like any medication you use,” Calleo said.

    Tweet noted that, in contrast to tobacco and alcohol, the United States has no national laws on the packaging of marijuana products.

    Several states have stepped into the void, she noted: Some have imposed limits on the amount of THC per package and required edibles to be in opaque packaging, rather than the brightly colored wrappers that are synonymous to candy in a child’s eyes.

    Calleo stressed that any time an adult fears a child has swallowed edibles, or any other potentially toxic substance, they should call their regional poison control center for guidance.

    “We’re not going to judge you,” he said. “Our job is to provide the best care possible.”

    More information

    The American Academy of Pediatrics has more on preventing marijuana poisoning.

     

    SOURCES: Marit Tweet, MD, assistant professor, emergency medicine, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield; Vincent Calleo, MD, medical director, Upstate New York Poison Center, and assistant professor, emergency medicine and pediatrics, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, N.Y.; Pediatrics, Jan. 3, 2023, online

    PEDS_2022057761.pdf

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  • Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield Come Together For ‘Ear-ie’ Cannabis Collaboration

    Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield Come Together For ‘Ear-ie’ Cannabis Collaboration

    Chew on this: Former boxing greats Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield were heated opponents in the ’90s, but now they are collaborators on a truly “ear-ie” cannabis product.

    Earlier this year, Tyson introduced Mike Bites, a line of pot gummies that are shaped like ears with a bite out of them, a nod to the 1997 WBA Heavyweight Championship, when Tyson infamously bit Holyfield’s ear.

    But time has apparently healed all wounds because on Black Friday, Tyson’s cannabis company, Tyson 2.0, will introduce Holy Ears, a line of THC- and Delta-8 THC-infused edibles.

    The duo plans to release Holyfield’s own cannabis line in 2023.

    Tyson has become an evangelist for cannabis and psychedelics in recent years, and he told HuffPost, “If I was on cannabis, I wouldn’t have bit [Holyfield’s] ear!”

    Although Tyson smoked weed as a kid, he gave it up for decades after he lost a spot on the 1984 Olympic boxing team.

    “I’d get raving drunk, and people would say it was better than getting high,” Tyson said, adding that he came back to cannabis because he didn’t like the effect of other painkillers, such as opiates.

    “You can’t shit. You can’t do nothing,” Tyson said.

    Considering Tyson’s ear-shaped cannabis gummies are based on a violent act toward Holyfield, it would be understandable if he didn’t approve of the product at first.

    And you’d be right. Sort of.

    “I didn’t think it was funny at first, but then I realized Mike hadn’t been in more trouble for a while,” Holyfield told HuffPost, adding that he appreciated how Tyson was helping people with his products.

    Holyfield admitted he hadn’t tried cannabis until he got his first Holy Ears sample.

    “I wanted to make sure I got home and didn’t do anything to anyone,” he said.

    “I ate it and laid down. I woke up the next morning and was like, ‘Whoa.’”

    Although cannabis is still stigmatized in some parts of the country ― “like the Bible Belt,” Tyson said ― Tyson’s 2.0 partner Chad Bronstein said the boxer’s pot proselytizing has helped change hearts, minds and even ears.

    “He’s a destigmatizing voice to cannabis and psychedelics,” Bronstein said. “He’s a ganja god.”

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