• Here is a link to the full explanation: https://rollitup.org/t/welcome-back-did-you-try-turning-it-off-and-on-again.1104810/

Cannabinoid-derived product by Ontario-based Tetra Bio-Pharma to be officially recognized as a drug

gb123

Well-Known Member
Safer and cheaper to grow your own
BUT THEYD LIKE YOU TO THINK DIFFERENTLY

here ya go!! These fools are True wanna bes fail time for them :cool:

Ontario-based Oriol Rhodes has over 30 years of experience in the healthcare industry, but it’s only recently that she has ventured into an uncharted territory: cannabis. “A year ago, I knew very little; particularly about substance use, and absolutely nothing about harm reduction, and how cannabis fits into this equation,” says Rhodes, a registered nurse.





The transition occurred as a result of a personal, not professional, reason. “I have a young son who’s now 19. My son was using street drugs, many of those drugs that he was using, he didn’t know at that time, were tainted with fentanyl. Even though I couldn’t stop him from taking drugs, I would drug test him on regular basis, and he tested positive for opioid and fentanyl, though declaring that he never touched them,” she says.

Fentanyl, an opioid pain reliever, is “20 to 40 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine, which makes the risk of accidental overdose very high,” as reported by Government of Canada. It is odourless, tasteless and invisible to the naked eye.
“Canada’s illegal drug supply is being contaminated with illegal fentanyl and other fentanyl-like drugs (e.g. carfentanil). Fentanyl is a cheap way for drug dealers to make street drugs more powerful, and it is causing high rates of overdoses and overdose deaths,” said the report.

Prior to switching to medical cannabis, which he has been on for the past six weeks, the now-recovering adult spent six months in an intensive rehab program at Portage Elora Drug Addiction Rehabilitation Centre for Youth from Mar. to Sept. 2017.

Can medical cannabis be the solution?
From Jan. to June 2018, Health Canada reported there were 2,066 apparent opioid-related deaths; 94 percent of these were accidental. “The data also indicate that fentanyl and other fentanyl-related substances continue to be a major driver of this crisis,” Health Canada notes.

It’s when presented with personal stories like that of the Rhodes family and the stream of alarming data that the significance of Tetra Bio-Pharma’s (TBP) clinical trials is worth exploring.


Guy Chamberland, CEO and chief scientific officer at TBP.

TBP confirms the company is investigating its PPP001 drug—a smokable cannabis drug product in compressed pellet form produced at its facility in Moncton—as an alternative to the opioid fentanyl in the management of breakthrough cancer pain. The cannabis-based drugs being investigated will have a Drug Identification Number (DIN), not only that but these medications will also be available at the pharmacy and will be covered by insurance.

“For me, at this point, the idea that cannabinoids have the potential to save the route to opioids alone is a significant contribution to medicine,” says Guy Chamberland, CEO and chief scientific officer at TBP, headquartered in Orleans, Ont. This is one of the five clinical trials—including investigational trials for advanced cancer pain, a head-to-head trial comparing cannabis to fentanyl in breakthrough cancer pain, fibromyalgia and chronic pain—being funded by TBP that have received a nod from Health Canada.

“Something needs to be done”: Making medicine attainable and affordable
Rhodes acknowledges that as a mother and a healthcare practitioner, she is keen and open to understanding research done by TBP. “It was on open social media that I connected with Chamberland and I made a comment about my son and his situation—at that point, my son was going through the first phases of the rehabilitation program,” says Rhodes.

The first conversation opened with Chamberland thinking the family would be dead-set against the use of medicinal cannabis. “And I said to him, quite frankly I am doing research and I am finding that I am more swayed towards the need for it than not. That’s what opened up our opportunity for conversing. He phoned me directly and we had a great conversation—he explained the type of research they were delving into at Tetra.”


Ontario-based healthcare practioner Oriol Rhodes.

Though using medical cannabis now, the cost of it, Rhodes admit,continues to be a challenge. “My son’s dosage is a gram a day. Even at gram a day, we are looking at $500 a month. Then you also need to look at purchasing a vaporizer, that adds to the cost as well,” she says.

But the family is hopeful that the TBP research will provide a much-needed breakthrough so that “we can rely on our insurance to help cover the cost—because I am sure the cost is quite prohibitive for a lot of people.” “Something needs to be done,” she emphasizes. “If we look at cannabis’ potential to replace opioid use—could you imagine the drop in substance abuse that it could eventually lead to?”



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gb123

Well-Known Member
why buy shit made pharma shit :spew::finger::wall:
Its better when grown in your back yard.:weed: Cleaner..no sprays..medical grade..not poison shwags grown by greedy mofos who DONT KNOW THE INDUSTRY WORTH SHIT
read the sirt paragraph

now shes an expert hahahaha classic wanna be mofos with ideas of grandeur..kinda like some of the folks here eh ;)
 

WHATFG

Well-Known Member
being funded by TBP that have received a nod from Health Canada.
....hmmmm...
Though using medical cannabis now, the cost of it, Rhodes admit,continues to be a challenge. “My son’s dosage is a gram a day. Even at gram a day, we are looking at $500 a month. Then you also need to look at purchasing a vaporizer, that adds to the cost as well,” she says.
...$16.66/g....plus the vaporizer...lol...
If we look at cannabis’ potential to replace opioid use—could you imagine the drop in substance abuse that it could eventually lead to?”
just wow....how long have people like me been saying this?....
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
If her son was using drugs laced with fentanyl he'd be dead. A pin head size can kill a person. But go on with your virtuous explanation, has nothing to do with cashing in on a multi billion dollar growing industry I'm sure.........
 

Egzoset

Well-Known Member
Salutations,

Just a couple days ago i heard on national TV that LPs now complain over a great difficulty to hire skilled employees because there were none before - aHummm... In any case the weird thing with UN's definition of "medical" vs "criminal" or "recreative" is that this is just as binary as the "science" of Trudeau, euh... or his mother when it comes to the "dangers" anyway.

Lets assume THC and CBD are both required for optimized effects and in amounts which meet the consumer's own preferences, e.g. without 3rd-party socio-toxic nany-state interference ideally, euh... If it's true CBD is a reciprocal moderator of THC and THC-centric genetic selections are to blame for the few marginal reactions really requiring medical attention then all those bigot anti-cannabic prohibitioni$ts performing self-serving Cultural Genocide out there must be made accountable and responsible for a severe artificial imbalance only supported by some blind recursive ideology self-perpetuating itself.

Dana Larsen once expressed this in non-equivocal terms: Trudeau should APOLOGIZE to pro-cannabic consumers and i'll add it's becoming urgent now that he's got sufficient practice!

:???:

Many years ago an old converted cop from USA once explained the really problematic consumption disorders resulting in personal issues ranged somewhere below 2.2 %, as i recall, and this included a lot of tainting contamination (from ill-advised interpretations, personal bias, whatever); kids who won't comply readily at school, for example, only because a predatory adult in panick (or else...) has decided to traumatize his victim(s) durably, to "teach" them a lesson while infantilizing the parents. Like TV propaganda causing a father to call the cops over a joint, who shall regret his mistake later... Etc., etc. Clearly put, once contextualized this 2.2 % group simply fails to justify exposure of ALL legally-vulnerable Canuck minors to a growing industry of "troubled teens", not to mention the root of this whole mess resides in unfair stressing laws producing socio-toxic effects to serve greedy buzz-focussed mercantile motivations - which Trudeau's LPs have effectively perpetuated. Lets just refer to Hexo's Terra Flower (0.46 % THC / 12.57 % CBD), sold for ~6.75 $/g at Québec's SQdC while medical clients fear shortages! What a farce pretending this is any threat to "organized crime" when the true criminals were ties and titles with obscene pride. And i'm ready to bet the perspective sounds quite similar in Ontario or anywhere else on the planet of cap'tain Itnoc.

My guess is we've all heard of UN's & WHO joint 2017 (mid-December) declaration on CBD and its possible implications by now, so how about THC:CBD ratio profiles as 2:1, 3:1 or even 4:1, instead of 1:0?? or 0:1 for that matter...

Animation for 2-to-1 THC vs CBD Ratio .GiF
In other words, why is this map looking absolutely ARTIFICIAL and severely DISTORDED if not because of brave drug warriors performing further VILIFICATION, generation after generation? As if it were a culturally-transmissible socio-toxic desease created by yet another Liberal named Henri-Sévérin Béland, in 1923...

I'm confident lots of honest decent people wouldn't mind for 4:1 THC:CBD sold below mafia's price-tag of 5.50 $/g, say @ 3.50 $/g with quality/tracking as currently provided for chrysanthemums.

But don't hold your breath, the buzz-driven THC-centric market is a dream-come-true for the evil individuals who don't mind turning us into Self-VILIFYING agents ourselves, by making e-Cigs and VAPORIZERS equal to toxic tobacco combustion. Only to collect more contaminated statistics to justify their lame existence!

Tumbled Weed (Mari-Caca) .GiF
Euh...

Good day, have fun!! :peace:
 
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VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
“A year ago, I knew very little; particularly about substance use, and absolutely nothing about harm reduction, and how cannabis fits into this equation,” says Rhodes, a registered nurse.
Speaks VOLUMES about the quality of our medical system, eh? Cannabis has been a legal medicine in Canada for nearly 20 years and this one didn't take the time to learn anything about it. What kind of nurse never deals with substance abuse patients at some point...? Maternity or geriatrics maybe?
 
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