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Doctors Group Launches Campaign Empowering More Healthcare Professionals To Join Drug Decriminalization Movement

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A group of doctors who support drug policy reform is launching a new campaign aimed at equipping physicians and healthcare professionals with skills to play a greater role in advocating for the decriminalization of drugs. Organizers say there’s a need for more voices from the medical community to take part in ongoing discussions around cannabis, psychedelics and harm reduction issues.

Doctors for Drug Policy Reform (D4DPR) says it’s spent the past year developing its new advocacy toolkit intended for healthcare professionals and scientists on “Transitioning from a Criminal Justice Model of Drug Use to a Health-focused Approach.” It includes guides to help would-be activists craft opinion pieces and engage with lawmakers and the media in order to “educate on the failures and lasting harms of the War on Drugs” and “confidently reframe drug use through a compassionate public health lens.”

“We’re assembling a core group of ‘on-call’ health professionals who are willing to lend their voice when timely advocacy opportunities arise,” says a recent D4DPR email about the effort, funded through a grant from the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA). “Now more than ever, we need healthcare professionals like you to speak up—especially when critical legislation is being debated.”

Bryon Adinoff, D4DPR’s president, told Marijuana Moment that it’s “imperative” that healthcare professionals take part.

“We want to health them speak up and learn how to do it in the right way,” he said.

Among the topics D4DPR is prioritizing with the new initiative are cannabis regulation, the decriminalization and therapeutic use of psychedelics as well as overdose prevention centers. By and large, Adinoff said, other medical professionals and organizations have “not been sufficiently active in this area.”

“Prohibition in general has really hurt individuals and communities around the world,” he said. “We’re obligated to speak up.”

In addition to guidance for how to engage in advocacy, the new D4DPR toolkit includes factsheets, a book of best advocacy practices and ways to connect with other advocates.

“Your insight and credibility can help shift public opinion, influence public policy, and reduce the stigma that harms our patients,” the group’s email to supporters says. “Together, we can create drug policies rooted in science, dignity, and care.”

Adinoff pointed out that health professionals are in a powerful position to influence public opinion, noting that “rightly or wrongly, survey after survey, we show up as the most trusted voice.”

“People believe us,” he said. “Even in this time of anti-science, I still think we have a better likelihood of being trusted to do the right thing—and say the right thing—compared to most other professions.”

D4DPR is asking would-be advocates to send an email to learn more about the new program.

The new advocacy push adds to other efforts the group has taken up in order to influence public policy. In March, for example, D4DPR published a position paper calling for states to decriminalize personal use and possession of an array of psychedelic substances.

“Criminalizing the personal use and possession of psychedelics is a costly misuse of resources,” it contends. “A cohesive state-level decriminalization framework would better align with evidence-based drug policies, ensuring a more just and effective response to substance use.”

The decriminalization white paper came on the heels of another D4DPR position paper about treatment strategies for opioid use disorder. That paper, by Hunter Platzman, argues that rather than rely agonist treatments such as methadone and buprenorphine, policymakers should embrace additional safer supply interventions, such as prescribing pharmaceutical-grade heroin.

While agonist treatments are legal, well established treatments, that paper argues, they’re used by fewer than 35 percent of people with opioid use disorder. Others are either unable to access the therapies or refuse them altogether. Prescription heroin, Platzman argues in the report, “demonstrates superior efficacy compared to traditional medications like methadone” and is far less lethal than highly toxic synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl.

In April of last year, meanwhile, D4DPR argued in a separate position paper that hemp-derived cannabinoids should be regulated more like marijuana.

“Our understanding of these compounds is limited,” the paper said of compounds like delta-8 THC. “Many have never been observed in nature and their toxicology is unknown.”

“Our stance at D4DPR,” it continued, “is that all intoxicating cannabinoids should be subject to a regulatory framework to ensure public safety.”

The cannabinoids paper was an attempt to bridge what the group described as a policy gap between between hemp—legalized federally through the 2018 Farm Bill—and marijuana, which remains federally illegal.

“The reason we got into this problem is by making this artificial distinction between two plants, hemp and cannabis, that are identical plants. One has low amounts of THC and one doesn’t,” Adinoff told Marijuana Moment at the time. “That’s what got us into this mess.”

D4DPR was long known as Doctors for Cannabis Regulation (DFCR) but rebranded in 2023 to reflect a growing focus on “a wider range of drug policy issues beyond cannabis,” including psychedelics and broader harm reduction matters, leaders said at the time.

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Florida Removes Nearly 11,000 Hemp Product Packages for Violating Child-Protection Standards

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Florida officials have removed nearly 11,000 packages of hemp products for violating child-protection standards for packaging, labeling, and marketing throughout the state during the Florida Department of Agriculture’s “Operation Safe Summer.”

In a statement, Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson said the agency has “drawn a hard line in Florida when it comes to protecting our children from dangerous and deceptive hemp products.”

“’Operation Safe Summer’ is our latest effort to crack down on bad actors who think they can skirt the law, ignore public safety, and profit off high-potency, intoxicating hemp products that endanger our children. We will not tire in our commitment to cleaning up this industry, holding violators accountable, and sending a clear message: if you refuse to follow the law, you won’t be doing business in Florida.” — Simpson in a press release

The agency in April and June advised businesses in April and June about the planned enforcement of new Agriculture Department rules around intoxicating hemp-infused products. The new rules, enacted in 2023, include:

Prohibition on specified color additives.

Mandatory child-resistant packaging in accordance with ASTM International D 3475-20, Standard Classification of Child Resistant Packages.

Certificates of analysis must now include laboratory information, the concentration of total delta-9 THC, and confirm the presence or absence of prohibited substances and pathogens.

Restrictions on marketing and advertising of hemp and hemp extract intended for human consumption.

Enhanced labeling requirements, including the use of common household measurements for serving sizes and the provision of a scannable barcode or QR code, must link to the certificate of analysis within three or fewer steps.

Water activity for cannabis flower or leaves must be 0.60 (±0.05).

Since July 2023, the Agriculture Department has uncovered more than 738,000 packages of hemp products in violation of child-protection standards.



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Nebraska Officials Propose Emergency Medical Cannabis Regulations

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The Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission last week approved emergency regulations to begin accepting medical cannabis applications as soon as Gov. Jim Pillen (R) allows the agency to proceed, the Nebraska Examiner reports. Under the state’s voter-approved medical cannabis law, the commission must start accepting applications by July 1.

The regulations largely mirror a legislative proposal that failed in the legislature last month and would remain in effect for 90 days after being approved by the governor.

Under the medical cannabis law, medical cannabis licensing must begin by October 1, and the emergency regulations would allow for the licensing of cultivators, product manufacturers, dispensaries, and transporters, with individuals or organizations only permitted one type of license.

Under the emergency regulations, only one dispensary would be allowed in each of the state’s 12 District Court Judicial Districts; no dispensary could be located within 1,000 feet of any school, daycare, church or hospital; at least 51% of an applicant’s business or organization must have resided in Nebraska and be a U.S. citizen for at least the past four years; and applicants would have to pay to submit two legible sets of fingerprints to the FBI and the Nebraska State Patrol for a criminal background check.

The regulations do not specify qualifying conditions for medical cannabis access but require that a physician’s recommendation specifies the product being recommended, the recommended dosage and potency, the number of doses, the directions for use, and the name of the patient.

The regulations allow dispensaries to sell oral tablets, capsules, or tinctures; non-sugarcoated gelatinous cubes, gelatinous rectangular cuboids, or lozenges in a cube or rectangular cuboid shape; topical preparations; suppositories; transdermal patches; and liquids or oils for administration using a nebulizer or inhaler. Flower is not permitted under the regulations, neither are infused food or drinks, any products containing artificial or natural flavoring or coloring, or any products that can be smoked or vaped.



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Kentucky Medical Marijuana Growers Will Be ‘Putting Seed In The Ground Really Soon,’ Governor Says

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The governor of Kentucky says that he expects to see medical marijuana growers “putting seed in the ground really soon,” projecting that patients will have access to cannabis before the year’s end.

Speaking with reporters after his “Team Kentucky” update, Gov. Andy Beshear (D) was asked whether medical marijuana patients will have to wait until 2026 before dispensaries open and products are available.

“I hope not,” the governor said. “On medical marijuana, we’re getting really close—this fall and this winter, I think we are very close to doing our site visits to both growers and potentially even the first processor.”

“My sense is that it’s probably the processors—with the amount of equipment and the size of the investment there—that are going to drive that,” he said. “But the first set of growers are going to be putting seed in the ground really soon.”

Beshear added that he acknowledges “it’s taken longer than we would have liked” to stand up the industry since he signed medical marijuana legalization into law in 2023.


Gov. Andy Beshear - Team Kentucky Update 6.26.25

“But the law kind of set that up with how it had to be implemented,” he said.

The governor noted that, in recognition of the delayed implementation, he recently signed an executive order to waive renewal fees for patients who get their cards this year so that they don’t get charged again before retailers open. And another order he signed providing protections for qualified patients who obtain medical marijuana outside of Kentucky “will stay in place.”

“We’re making sure that that doesn’t hold us back from getting the other parts open, because we’re opening all these different parts at the same time,” he said. “So almost all of our dispensaries [that received licenses] now have their final counties. I think we will have all of them with the final counties here in about a month.”

Beshear separately announced this month that the state has launched a new online directory that lets people see where medical cannabis dispensaries will be opening near them.

He emphasized that the state has been working to deliver access to patients “at the earliest possible date,” and that involved expediting the licensing process. The governor in January also ceremonially awarded the commonwealth’s first medical marijuana cards.


Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments.


Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access.

Meanwhile, the governor sent a letter to Kentucky’s congressional delegation in January, “urging them to take decisive action to protect the constitutional rights of our law abiding medical cannabis patients” by repealing the federal ban on gun possession by people who use marijuana.

That came after bipartisan Kentucky senators filed legislation that similarly called on the state’s federal representatives to take corrective action, which Beshear said he supports but would like to see even more sweeping change on the federal level.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) warned Kentucky residents late last year that, if they choose to participate in the state’s medical marijuana program, they will be prohibited from buying or possessing firearms under federal law.

As far as the implementation of the state’s medical cannabis law goes, Beshear said in his State of the Commonwealth address in January that patients will have access to cannabis sometime “this year.” He also later shared tips for patients to find a doctor and get registered to participate in the cannabis program.

Health practitioners have been able to start assessing patients for recommendations since the beginning of December.

While there currently aren’t any up-and-running dispensaries available to patients, Beshear has further affirmed that an executive order he signed in 2023 will stay in effect in the interim, protecting patients who possess medical cannabis purchased at out-of-state licensed retailers.

During last year’s November election, Kentucky also saw more than 100 cities and counties approve local ordinances to allow medical cannabis businesses in their jurisdictions. The governor said the election results demonstrate that “the jury is no longer out” on the issue that is clearly supported by voters across partisan and geographical lines.

New Chicago Police Policy Discourages Searches Based On Marijuana Odor

Photo courtesy of Mike Latimer.

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