skip to Main Content
NFL and cannabis: League, union offer $1 million for pain management research

The NFL and NFLPA are jointly offering up to $1 million in grants to researchers who can help the league move forward with alternatives to opioid-based pain management.

Dr. Allen Sills, the NFL’s Chief Medical Officer, on Tuesday listed cannabis and CBD as areas the league wants to better understand.

“Players are always looking to find treatments that are going to improve their quality of life,” Sills said. “But at the same time, players are significantly concerned about the impact on performance.”

At issue are two questions: is cannabis safe for pain management? And does it work? The league wants to see research, too, about how it interacts with other medications.

The league will issue anywhere from one to five grants in December, with $1 million being split among the winners.

The NFL is not changing its marijuana policy, which was agreed to in last year’s Collective Bargaining Agreement. The CBA loosened the league’s marijuana rules last year — players can’t be suspended for testing positive and can only be tested during a two-week period each year. The threshold to trigger a positive test increased four-fold. [Read more at Chicago Sun-Times]

This Post Has 0 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Stories

Japan’s cannabis market growing rapidly amid regulatory shift

Japan’s cannabis market expanded sixfold over four years to ¥24 billion ($154 million) in 2023, a trend that is expected to accelerate with the amendment in December of cannabis laws,…

Ispire Leads with a Focus on Safety and Innovation

Los Angeles-based Ispire Technologies (NASDAQ: ISPR) is a three-year-old company built on the foundation (and reputation) of a global enterprise with many years of experience as an ODM (original design…

Sacramento is ’cannabis capital of California,’ study says. What makes it a top weed city?

Sacramento is one of the best cities in the nation for cannabis fans, according to a new study. Real Estate Witch and Leafly, an online cannabis guide and marketplace, analyzed…

Two years after first legal cannabis sales, New Jerseyans still seek home cultivation

For the last two years, people have been able to stroll into New Jersey dispensaries to buy weed. But growing your own cannabis plant remains a third-degree felony. Despite a growing…

More Categories

Back To Top
×Close search
Search