News

A new study has found that, among women with a high desire to avoid becoming pregnant, those who drank heavily had a 50% ...
New research from UC San Francisco reveals cannabis edibles may pose greater cardiovascular risks than previously thought.
While heavy drinking increases pregnancy risk among those most wanting to avoid conception, cannabis use does not.
Women who drank heavily, even though they strongly wished to avoid pregnancy, were 50% more likely to become pregnant than ...
New study of 45,000 patients finds people with cannabis use disorder are 3.25 times more likely to develop oral cancer within ...
A recent study by researchers at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine has found that individuals with ...
Mounting evidence is tying cannabis to health risks Last year, a study linked daily use of marijuana – whether smoked, vaped, or eaten in edible form – to a significantly higher risk of heart ...
The findings, based on health data from 200 million people worldwide—including in the United States—showed that cannabis users had a 20 percent higher risk of stroke and twice the risk of ...
Cannabis use was associated with a 29% increased risk of acute coronary syndrome (RR=1.29), a 20% increased risk of stroke (RR=1.20), and a more than doubled risk of cardiovascular death (RR=2.10).
In the study, published Tuesday in the journal Heart, researchers found cannabis use is linked to a doubled risk of dying from cardiovascular disease, a 29% higher risk for acute coronary syndrome ...
A new study has found that, among women with a high desire to avoid becoming pregnant, those who drank heavily had a 50% higher risk of becoming pregnant than those who drank moderately or not at all.
A recent study by researchers at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine has found that individuals with ...