In his article “We Just Got a Much Clearer Picture of Marijuana’s Health Effects”, Sy Mukherjee who has been a writer at “Fortune” since 2016 with a focus on health, pharmaceuticals, and biotechnology states “For one, it seems pretty clear that cannabis products help treat chronic pain, prevent nausea in cancer patients under chemotherapy, and improve patient-reported outcomes for muscle problems in people with multiple sclerosis.” That is one source that shows the support that marijuana can assist people’s health. In addition to Sy Mukherjee’s article, in her editorial “Here's What Science Says About Medical Marijuana”, Alice Park is a staff writer at TIME. Since 1993, she has reported on the breaking frontiers of health and medicine in articles covering issues such as AIDS, anxiety, and Alzheimer's disease. Park states in her piece “The studies evaluated marijuana’s ability to relieve a range of symptoms including nausea from chemotherapy, loss of appetite among HIV positive patients, multiple sclerosis spasms, depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, psychosis and Tourette syndrome”. Mukherjee and Park both show examples of symptoms that marijuana can treat, such as nausea from chemotherapy. Their evidence displays that marijuana is beneficial for people, who need to relieve a bad medical symptom. That is important because people care a lot about their health, and if there is a way for people to treat themselves it is valuable that people recognize that. Since cancer is such a bad disease for many people, marijuana can be a reliable source when going through treatment. If marijuana is a dependable substance that can aid in health, then people should use it. The discussions of marijuana and its health benefits will continue to happen, but so far it has been
In his article “We Just Got a Much Clearer Picture of Marijuana’s Health Effects”, Sy Mukherjee who has been a writer at “Fortune” since 2016 with a focus on health, pharmaceuticals, and biotechnology states “For one, it seems pretty clear that cannabis products help treat chronic pain, prevent nausea in cancer patients under chemotherapy, and improve patient-reported outcomes for muscle problems in people with multiple sclerosis.” That is one source that shows the support that marijuana can assist people’s health. In addition to Sy Mukherjee’s article, in her editorial “Here's What Science Says About Medical Marijuana”, Alice Park is a staff writer at TIME. Since 1993, she has reported on the breaking frontiers of health and medicine in articles covering issues such as AIDS, anxiety, and Alzheimer's disease. Park states in her piece “The studies evaluated marijuana’s ability to relieve a range of symptoms including nausea from chemotherapy, loss of appetite among HIV positive patients, multiple sclerosis spasms, depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, psychosis and Tourette syndrome”. Mukherjee and Park both show examples of symptoms that marijuana can treat, such as nausea from chemotherapy. Their evidence displays that marijuana is beneficial for people, who need to relieve a bad medical symptom. That is important because people care a lot about their health, and if there is a way for people to treat themselves it is valuable that people recognize that. Since cancer is such a bad disease for many people, marijuana can be a reliable source when going through treatment. If marijuana is a dependable substance that can aid in health, then people should use it. The discussions of marijuana and its health benefits will continue to happen, but so far it has been