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Today — 26 January 2026Main stream

Trump’s Marijuana Rescheduling Move Shows Gun Ban For Consumers Is Outdated, ACLU Lawyers Tell Supreme Court

26 January 2026 at 11:51

The federal ban on gun ownership by marijuana consumers is nonsensical and unconstitutional—and it’s made all the more confounding by the fact that President Donald Trump recently directed the completion of federal cannabis rescheduling process, ACLU attorneys for a man at the center of a U.S. Supreme Court case say.

In a brief submitted to justices on Friday, attorneys for Ali Danial Hemani gave a comprehensive overview of their legal analysis in the case, U.S. v. Hemani. This comes just over a month before the court is scheduled to hear oral arguments in the proceedings.

Hemani’s counsel with the ACLU are contending that the federal statute 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(3) that prohibits cannabis users from possessing firearms lacks adequate historical analogues, fails to clearly define who is considered an “unlawful user” of a drug and flies in the face of evolving marijuana policies at the state and federal level.

“Like tens of millions of Americans, respondent Ali Hemani owned a handgun for self-defense, keeping it safely secured at home,” the brief says. “Like many of those same Americans, he also consumed marijuana a few days a week.”

Stripping cannabis consumers of their gun rights under §922(g)(3) represents a “draconian” policy that violates

The post Trump’s Marijuana Rescheduling Move Shows Gun Ban For Consumers Is Outdated, ACLU Lawyers Tell Supreme Court appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Marijuana Use Isn’t A ‘Red Flag’ In The Dating Scene, Three In Four Americans Say In New Survey

26 January 2026 at 09:54

Marijuana use appears to be more of a green flag, rather than a red flag, for Americans who are dating, according to a new poll.

Drug Rehab USA surveyed 1,000 people with recent dating experience to learn about how substance use in a potential partner is perceived.

It found that just one in four respondents consider marijuana use a “red flag” in dating. About four in five millennials—and seven in ten Gen Z adults—don’t mind if a partner consumes cannabis.

Compared to marijuana, significantly more respondents (38 percent) said smoking cigarettes is a red flag in dating. “High-risk” illicit drug use was the biggest turn-off, at 73 percent, followed by misused prescription drugs (60 percent).

The only substance that carried less of a stigma than marijuana is alcohol, with 22 percent saying they don’t consider drinking a red flag.

Additionally, 68 percent of those polled said that they don’t believe their relationships would be stronger if their partner stopped using marijuana. Ten percent said such cessation could actually lead them to grow apart.

The survey also found that 22 percent of those who are dating say their partner consumes cannabis daily, which rises to to 35 percent for Gen Z

The post Marijuana Use Isn’t A ‘Red Flag’ In The Dating Scene, Three In Four Americans Say In New Survey appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Top Federal Drug Official Touts Therapeutic ‘Promise’ Of Psychedelics And Slams Schedule I Research Barriers

26 January 2026 at 09:20

A top federal health official is again touting the therapeutic “promise” of psychedelics such as psilocybin and MDMA—though she says the drugs’ Schedule I status remains a research barrier to scientifically validating their efficacy.

In a blog post this month, National Institution on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Director Nora Volkow said the “potential use of psychedelics in the treatment of various mental health conditions has made these drugs a hot area of scientific research, as well as growing public interest.”

NIDA, as well as other agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), have been particularly interested in tapping into the therapeutic potential of ketamine, psilocybin and MDMA—each of which are undergoing trials that could pave the path to their broader accessibility to patients with serious mental health conditions.

These psychedelics “represent a potential paradigm shift in the way we address substance use disorders,” Volkow said, caveating that “there is much we still do not know about these drugs, the way they work, and how to administer them, and there is danger of the hype getting out ahead of the science.”

The director said the “promise of psychedelic compounds likely centers on their ability to promote rapid neural rewiring,” which

The post Top Federal Drug Official Touts Therapeutic ‘Promise’ Of Psychedelics And Slams Schedule I Research Barriers appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Feds Should Consider ‘Relaxing’ Marijuana Drug Testing Rules For Transportation Workers, Congresswoman Says

26 January 2026 at 08:03

A Democratic congresswoman is pushing the federal government to consider “relaxing” strict drug testing rules for transportation workers that punish people for marijuana use outside of work hours that doesn’t actually lead to being high on the job.

Rep. Emily Randall (D-WA) told colleagues at a hearing this month that current policy is impeding efforts to ensure there’s a “robust workforce” to staff ferries that are a popular form of transportation in her home state of Washington.

The congresswoman, who is a co-chair of the Congressional Ferry Caucus, said lawmakers need to be open to “creative solutions” to the problem.

“Federal regulations require drug testing for some maritime employees in safety-sensitive positions, including ferry workers,” she said. We could consider relaxing the rules around recreational marijuana use in states where it’s legal, as long as it’s not used on the job and outside a certain window before their shift.”

“Right now, you could drug test positive for a month or longer after using legal recreational marijuana in Washington and be unable to work as a ferry operator,” Randall said at the the “member day” hearing before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Randall is cosponsoring legislation to federally

The post Feds Should Consider ‘Relaxing’ Marijuana Drug Testing Rules For Transportation Workers, Congresswoman Says appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Virginia cannabis sales legalization bills advance (Newsletter: January 26, 2026)

26 January 2026 at 06:11

New hemp regulation bill in Congress; MA anti-marijuana campaign challenge fails; Bipartisan lawmakers talk psychedelics; SD cannabis in hospitals

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House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Chairman Morgan Griffith (R-VA) and Rep. Marc Veasey (D-TX) filed a bill to federally regulate consumable hemp products—offering a potential alternative to the THC ban that President Donald Trump recently signed into law.

The Virginia Senate Rehabilitation & Social Services Committee and a House General Laws subcommittee both approved bills to legalize recreational marijuana sales, building on the state’s current law that allows personal cannabis possession and home cultivation.

The Massachusetts State Ballot Law Commission rejected a challenge claiming that a campaign seeking to roll back marijuana legalization used misleading

The post Virginia cannabis sales legalization bills advance (Newsletter: January 26, 2026) appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Yesterday — 25 January 2026Main stream

Missouri Marijuana Businesses Fined For Bringing Clones Across State Lines In Violation Of Rules

25 January 2026 at 08:13

“Some licensees believed they were permitted to bring in clones or tissue cultures as well as seeds on an ongoing basis.”

By Rebecca Rivas, Missouri Independent

At least seven marijuana cultivation facilities in Missouri have been fined over the last year for breaking what’s known in the industry as the “immaculate conception rule.”

Marijuana can’t pass over state lines because it’s still federally illegal, and state law mandates that all marijuana must be grown within the state.

However, there is one year after a licensee passes a commencement inspection when the state essentially closes its eyes and puts its hands over its ears on how a cultivation facility starts its inventory.

It’s called the immaculate conception rule, and six facilities were fined up to $500,000 from breaking it last year.

A spokesperson for the Missouri Division of Cannabis Regulation said regulators “discovered some licensees believed they were permitted to bring in clones or tissue cultures as well as seeds on an ongoing basis. However, this practice is a violation of seed-to-sale tracking regulations.”

To keep up with customers’ preferences and demand, these companies had been bringing in clones, or starter plants, and tissue cultures, which is a form of in-vitro

The post Missouri Marijuana Businesses Fined For Bringing Clones Across State Lines In Violation Of Rules appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Before yesterdayMain stream

South Dakota Senate Rejects Debate On Banning Intoxicating Hemp And Kratom

24 January 2026 at 10:53

A committee had advanced the bills without a recommendation to pass them.

By John Hult, South Dakota Searchlight

State senators voted against discussions on banning hemp-derived consumables and kratom on Thursday at the South Dakota Capitol in Pierre.

Separate bills to ban the use, possession, sale or consumption of those intoxicating substances advanced out of a Senate committee on Wednesday, but the committee voted to send them to the Senate floor with no recommendation, rather than a recommendation to pass them.

By Senate rules, bills that land on the full chamber’s calendar without a recommendation need the support of a majority of senators before they’re eligible for a debate, and ultimately for a vote.

Sen. Kevin Jensen, R-Canton, moved to put the bills on the Senate’s calendar for Monday. He said both bills had drawn spirited debate and survived attempts by some committee members to defeat them.

On the bill to ban hemp-derived intoxicants for anyone without a medical marijuana card, Senate Bill 61, Jensen said there are amendments in the works to address its opponents’ concerns.

He offered similar comments, without referencing possible amendments, when he moved to place Senate Bill 77’s ban on kratom products on the Senate calendar.

“It’s

The post South Dakota Senate Rejects Debate On Banning Intoxicating Hemp And Kratom appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Ohio Cities Begin Receiving Marijuana Revenue To Support Local Programs And Services

24 January 2026 at 07:50

“The people have spoken. I’m proud to see this funding distributed across Ohio and look forward to seeing the ways these funds will benefit local communities.”

By David Beasley, The Center Square

For cities and towns in Ohio that have allowed recreational marijuana dispensaries, it’s payday time.

A 10 percent tax on cannabis products, approved by Ohio voters in 2023, goes to cities and towns with dispensaries at 36 percent rate of the tax revenue, according to state law.

This month, cities and towns with dispensaries are receiving their first checks, a total of $33 million.

The city of Piqua is one of those, with a check for $438,000, which it plans to use for park improvements.

“Local governments—including Piqua—decided to allow recreational marijuana sales within their communities based on the understanding that funds would come back to local control to best serve the individual needs of the community,” city manager Paul Oberdorfer said in a statement.

A small town called Seven Mile Village, which has a population of only 712 people and an annual budget of about $75,000, received a check for $400,000, State Sen. Steve Huffman, R-Tipp City, told The Center Square.

Huffman, a medical doctor, opposed legalizing

The post Ohio Cities Begin Receiving Marijuana Revenue To Support Local Programs And Services appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Bipartisan Lawmakers Warn That Even One Mistake In Push For Psychedelics Access Could Derail Progress

23 January 2026 at 12:22

Bipartisan congressional lawmakers are stressing the importance of strategically advancing psychedelics reform in a way that mitigates bureaucratic conflict and the influence of outside interests. Even just one misstep could threaten to upend the movement, they say.

At a public forum in Washington, D.C.—hosted by the Psychedelic Medicine Coalition (PMC) and Mission Within Foundation (MWF) last week—Reps. Lou Correa (D-CA), Jack Bergman (R-MI) and Morgan Luttrell (R-TX) spoke about the work ahead to provide access to psychedelics for patients.

Much of the focus centered around the need to give military veterans alternative treatment options for serious mental health conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Psychedelics like MDMA and ibogaine could help fill that gap, the legislators said.

Luttrell said a key challenge supporters are up against is the inaccessibility of data from private research institutions that could demonstrate the therapeutic efficacy of psychedelics—something that he argued would likely move the needle for members who are on the fence on the issue.

The congressman said he and colleagues have pressed agencies such as the Department of Defense (DOD), U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) about the problem.

“How do you get

The post Bipartisan Lawmakers Warn That Even One Mistake In Push For Psychedelics Access Could Derail Progress appeared first on GrowCola.com.

New Bipartisan Congressional Bill Would Regulate Hemp Products, In Contrast To Ban Trump Signed

23 January 2026 at 11:35

Bipartisan congressional lawmakers have filed a new bill to regulate consumable hemp products—offering a potential alternative to the outright THC ban that was included in a spending bill President Donald Trump signed late last year.

House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health Chairman Morgan Griffith (R-VA) and Rep. Marc Veasey (D-TX) introduced the Hemp Enforcement, Modernization, and Protection (HEMP) Act on Thursday as the future of the market sits in limbo.

The proposal would affirmatively allow the sale of consumable hemp products to adults 21 and older. That includes edibles, beverages and inhalable items. Certain provisions have been amended since the GOP sponsor first circulated a discussion draft of the legislation in August.

“Despite raising repeated concerns about the ongoing confusion regarding the safety, consumption and sale of CBD-containing products until a discussion draft of this bill was circulated, I believe we have yet to see meaningful progress at the federal level,” Griffith said in a press release.

“I am proud to lead the effort in the House along with Representative Veasey to present a path forward for the federal regulation of CBD products,” he said. “After discussions with stakeholders, federal officials and other relevant authorities, I believe the HEMP

The post New Bipartisan Congressional Bill Would Regulate Hemp Products, In Contrast To Ban Trump Signed appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Virginia Senators Approve Bill To Legalize Marijuana Sales Under New Pro-Reform Governor

23 January 2026 at 10:12

Virginia senators have advanced a bill to legalize and regulate recreational marijuana sales—one of several reform proposals under consideration as the 2026 session gets underway.

The Senate Rehabilitation & Social Services Committee on Friday took up two marijuana sales legalization measures. After amending one of the proposals from Sen. Lashrecse Aird (D) with a substitute version, it passed the panel in a 8-7 vote.

The bill largely aligns with recommendations released last month by the legislature’s Joint Commission to Oversee the Transition of the Commonwealth into a Cannabis Retail Market.

Since legalizing cannabis possession and home cultivation in 2021, Virginia lawmakers have worked to establish a commercial marijuana market—only to have those efforts consistently stalled under former Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R), who twice vetoed measures to enact it that were sent to his desk by the legislature.

“In 2021 Virginia became the first southern state to legalize adult use cannabis, and five years later, Virginia has yet to implement the marketplace we originally envisioned,” Aird said. “Each year that we go without a marketplace, the illicit market grows and health and safety concerns rise for our citizens.”

“The legislation establishes a market, once and for all, that will protect consumers, protect

The post Virginia Senators Approve Bill To Legalize Marijuana Sales Under New Pro-Reform Governor appeared first on GrowCola.com.

South Dakota Lawmakers Reject Bill To Let Terminally Ill Patients Use Medical Marijuana In Hospitals

23 January 2026 at 08:37

A South Dakota legislative committee has rejected a bill that would have allowed terminally ill patients to use medical cannabis in hospitals and hospices.

The House Health and Human Services Committee voted 12-1 on Thursday to defer the measure to the 41st day of the session, effectively killing it.

Rep. Eric Emery (D), the sponsor of HB 1053, said it is a “narrow and carefully constructed bill that addresses one specific issue: ensuring that terminally ill patients who are already legally authorized to use medical cannabis under South Dakota law may continue the treatment when they enter the hospital or a hospice facility.”

“Under the current law, a patient may legally use medical cannabis at home with their approved practitioner. But once that same patient is admitted into a hospital or hospice facility, that access is abruptly ended—and not because the doctor has changed their mind, but because the facilities’ policies vary widely across the state,” he said. “For terminally ill patients, this disruption can mean unplanned pain, nausea, anxiety or even loss of appetite when care is no longer focused on the cure but comfort and dignity.”

“I’ve seen firsthand the pain and the suffering that often accompany… this

The post South Dakota Lawmakers Reject Bill To Let Terminally Ill Patients Use Medical Marijuana In Hospitals appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Massachusetts Officials Reject Challenge To Marijuana Legalization Rollback Initiative Amid Allegations Of Deceptive Petitioning Tactics

23 January 2026 at 07:49

Massachusetts officials have rejected a challenge to a ballot initiative that seeks to significantly roll back the state’s marijuana legalization law by repealing regulated sales.

Weeks after cannabis activists filed a complaint with the State Ballot Law Commission under the Secretary of State’s office—alleging that petitioners with the anti-cannabis campaign used misleading tactics to convince voters to support its ballot placement—the body on Thursday overruled the objection.

The commission said advocates who challenged the ballot measure raised “unsupported allegations” about the propriety of the signature gathering process that they said warranted official scrutiny.

The claim “rings hollow given that absolutely no admissible evidence has been presented or offered supporting the allegations made,” the commission’s ruling said.

“With this decision, the certification of this round of petitions has now formally ended, and all eleven initiatives are now before the Legislature,” Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin (D), who chairs the commission, said, referring collectively to all ballot petitions advancing in the state this year including on other unrelated issues. “If the Legislature chooses not to pass any of the initiatives, the petitioners will have the opportunity to begin the final round of signature gathering in May.”

This represents a setback for

The post Massachusetts Officials Reject Challenge To Marijuana Legalization Rollback Initiative Amid Allegations Of Deceptive Petitioning Tactics appeared first on GrowCola.com.

MA voters regret signing anti-cannabis ballot petition, poll shows (Newsletter: January 23, 2026)

23 January 2026 at 06:12

NH legalization hearing; WA medical marijuana in hospitals; Alcohol coalition on hemp drinks; Study: 10M Americans microdosed psychedelics in 2025

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The New Hampshire Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on a bill to legalize marijuana, with the sponsor saying President Donald Trump’s federal cannabis rescheduling order means it’s time for the state to act.

The Washington State House Health Care & Wellness Committee approved a bill to allow terminally ill patients to use medical cannabis in healthcare facilities such as hospitals, nursing homes and

The post MA voters regret signing anti-cannabis ballot petition, poll shows (Newsletter: January 23, 2026) appeared first on GrowCola.com.

New Hampshire Senators Debate Bill To Legalize Marijuana, With Sponsor Saying Trump’s Rescheduling Move Means State Must Act

22 January 2026 at 14:21

New Hampshire senators took up a bill to legalize marijuana in the state on Thursday.

The Senate Judiciary Committee did not vote on the legislation, but members heard testimony both in support of and against the measure.

If enacted into law, SB485 would allow adults over the age of 21 to legally possess up to four ounces of cannabis in plant form and 20 grams of concentrated cannabis products, as well as other products containing no more than 2,000 milligrams of THC.

“New Hampshire is now the only state in New England that has not legalized and regulated cannabis. Every single one of our neighbors has figured this out,” Sen. Donovan Fenton (D), the bill’s lead sponsor told the panel. “Meanwhile, we’re still pretending prohibition is working, while people just drive to Massachusetts, Maine or Vermont legally and bring it back home.”

He called President Donald Trump’s recent federal marijuana rescheduling executive order a “clear signal that even the federal government now recognizes what most Granite Staters already know: Cannabis is not the same category as the most dangerous drugs, and it should be handled with smart and regulated adult approach.”

“So question for New Hampshire is simple, do we lead

The post New Hampshire Senators Debate Bill To Legalize Marijuana, With Sponsor Saying Trump’s Rescheduling Move Means State Must Act appeared first on GrowCola.com.

South Dakota Senate Panel Advances Bills To Ban Intoxicating Hemp And Kratom—But Without Recommendations For Passage

22 January 2026 at 12:29

“I’d hate to take a product away from people who are using it responsibly.”

A South Dakota Senate panel advanced—but did not endorse—bans on hemp-derived intoxicants and kratom on Wednesday at the Capitol in Pierre.

Both bills were sponsored by Sen. John Carley, R-Piedmont.

The Senate Health and Human Services Committee voted unanimously to put the two prohibition bills in front of the full state Senate with no recommendation. Committees generally give a “do pass” recommendation to the bills they send out for a floor vote.

The votes came one day after the Senate Judiciary Committee offered its unqualified support for a bill meant to restrict the sale of certain hemp-based products to people older than 21. That bill came from Attorney General Marty Jackley (R).

In testimony about Carley’s bills, business owners and consumers of products like hemp-derived THC seltzers and kratom said they helped people kick opioids or alcohol. They also mentioned sales taxes collected on consumable products and the value of hemp to South Dakota farmers. That led some committee members to oppose the bills and sparked failed attempts to block the proposals. Ultimately, however, the committee opted to let the state Senate weigh in.

“We need

The post South Dakota Senate Panel Advances Bills To Ban Intoxicating Hemp And Kratom—But Without Recommendations For Passage appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Nearly Half Of Massachusetts Voters Who Signed Anti-Marijuana Initiative Petitions Feel Misled By Campaign Workers, Poll Finds

22 January 2026 at 11:40

Nearly half of Massachusetts voters who signed a petition to put a marijuana legalization rollback initiative on the ballot say they were misled by the anti-cannabis campaign’s signature collectors, according to a new poll.

The survey involved more than 2,300 residents who signed the petition for the measure backed by the Coalition for a Healthy Massachusetts. It found that 1,163 voters said they would not have supported its ballot placement had they known it would repeal key parts of the state’s cannabis law allowing commercial sales.

Massachusetts officials are already reviewing complaints about allegedly deceptive signature gathering tactics for the initiative, which the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s Elections Division certified for the ballot last month after the campaign turned in a sufficient number of petitions.

This latest poll, spearheaded by the pro-legalization Committee to Protect Cannabis Regulation, adds to suspicions that petitioners working on behalf of the Coalition for a Healthy Massachusetts were either deliberately misleading voters or failing to disclose the initiative’s intent.

It showed that numerous voters were under the impression that the initiative petition they signed was meant to tackle non-marijuana issues such as public education, mitigating the fentanyl crisis and expanding housing opportunities, for example.

Of

The post Nearly Half Of Massachusetts Voters Who Signed Anti-Marijuana Initiative Petitions Feel Misled By Campaign Workers, Poll Finds appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Washington Bill To Let Seriously Ill Patients Use Medical Cannabis In Hospitals Advances

22 January 2026 at 11:29

Washington State lawmakers on Wednesday approved a bill that would allow terminally ill patients to use medical cannabis in healthcare facilities such as hospitals, nursing homes and hospices.

The House Health Care & Wellness Committee advanced the legislation, sponsored by Rep. Shelley Kloba (D), in a 17-1 vote.

“This bill here builds on what we have as a decades-long experience with medical cannabis, in very controlled kind of environment,” Kloba said at a hearing before the panel last week. “I believe that with this bill we have struck a balance between a process that works for hospitals and gives them the kind of safeguards that they want and meets the needs of terminal patients who would like to try something maybe a little different than the standard care for a palliative situation.”

If enacted into law, HB 2152 would mandate that hospitals and other specified healthcare facilities allow terminally ill patients to use medical marijuana on the premises beginning on January 1, 2027, subject to certain rules and restrictions.

“The medical use of cannabis may support improved quality of life for a qualifying patient…with a terminal condition,” the bill’s text says. “It is the intent of the legislature to promote

The post Washington Bill To Let Seriously Ill Patients Use Medical Cannabis In Hospitals Advances appeared first on GrowCola.com.

Woody Harrelson Got Kicked Out Of Two Bars For Smoking Marijuana With Matthew McConaughey’s Mom

22 January 2026 at 09:47

Actor Woody Harrelson apparently got kicked out of two bars for smoking marijuana indoors—with the mother of fellow star Matthew McConaughey.

The two laughed about the shenanigans during a recent podcast appearance with Ted Danson.

While McConaughey has long been associated with cannabis culture in various movie roles such as his character in Dazed and Confused, he has decided to abstain from today’s potent cannabis because it “doesn’t agree” with him—saying he fell out of trees and chipped teeth three times while high and looking at the full moon.

The trio of actors shared anecdotes about their marijuana experiences on an episode of Danson and Harrelson’s podcast “Where Everybody Knows Your Name” that was released last week.

McConaughey disclosed that Harrelson and his mother have “a major crush on each other” and have “been kicked out of two bars for smoking ‘mar-i-ja-wanna,’ as my dad would call it—for smoking joints together—setting off fire alarm in one. The other one was [the staff was] just like, ‘That’s illegal. What the hell y’all doing? Get out of here.’ And they ran.”

“You got away both times, didn’t you?” he asked.

Harrelson confirmed: “Both times we got out of trouble.”

Danson

The post Woody Harrelson Got Kicked Out Of Two Bars For Smoking Marijuana With Matthew McConaughey’s Mom appeared first on GrowCola.com.

10 Million US Adults Microdosed Psychedelics Last Year, New Report Shows

22 January 2026 at 08:50

Nearly 10 million American adults microdosed psychedelic substances such as psilocybin, LSD or MDMA in 2025, according to a new analysis.

The results of the RAND Corporation survey indicate that microdosing—which involves ingesting a small amount of a drug to improve mood and well-being without experiencing hallucinations or a full-scale trip—is a popular practice in the U.S.

“There is an emerging discussion about the effects of microdosing on creativity, well-being and mental health, but until now little was known about how common it is,” Michelle Priest, a RAND researcher who served as lead author of the new report, said in a press release on Wednesday. “Our findings suggest that for those who use psychedelics, taking small doses is a big deal.”

More than two-thirds (69 percent) of adults who used psilocybin in the last year said they microdosed at least once. Among MDMA consumers, 65 percent microdosed in the last year and 59 percent of LSD users did so.

Overall, RAND estimated that approximately 3.7 percent of U.S. adults—or 9.55 million people—microdosed psilocybin, MDMA and/or LSD in 2025.

The RAND paper also looks at psychedelics use more broadly, beyond microdosing—finding that the five most commonly used psychedelics were psilocybin (11 million

The post 10 Million US Adults Microdosed Psychedelics Last Year, New Report Shows appeared first on GrowCola.com.

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