Texas House signals expanding state’s medical marijuana program
- Texas House is voting on House Bill 46 to expand medical cannabis access, allowing new products and more qualifying conditions starting September 1, 2025.
- Demand for the bill grew from veterans like David Bass, who used medical cannabis to control PTSD symptoms after his 25-year Army service and Iraq deployment.
- The bill permits more satellite dispensaries to ease patient access, addressing challenges especially in rural Texas regions such as the Panhandle.
- Experts highlight that cannabis impairs driving by reducing attention, reaction time, and decision-making, but reliable detection tools and federal support remain lacking.
- Expanding public health research and coordinated policies could improve road safety and law enforcement effectiveness amid growing cannabis legalization nationwide.
28 Articles
28 Articles
Bill that Includes Expansion of Medical Marijuana Access for Vets Approved by Texas House
Military veterans would be given special access, and their doctors would be allowed under the law to prescribe low-dose THC for conditions that are not on the state’s list.
Texas House passes bill expanding compassionate use of medical cannabis
House Bill 46 is expected to pass the lower chamber Tuesday. It reached the floor ahead of the House rewrite of Senate Bill 3, which would impose strict new regulations on consumable products containing THC.

Texas House OKs bill to expand medical marijuana provisions
AUSTIN — A hefty expansion to the state’s narrow medical marijuana program won overwhelming approval in the Texas House on Monday, giving veterans broad access to THC treatments and raising the number of dispensaries allowed in the state.


Legalizing Marijuana Reduces The Cost Of Workers’ Compensation Claims And Lowers Prescription Drug Use By Patients, Study Shows
A new study on marijuana legalization’s effect on workers’ compensation finds that while the policy change is associated with a “gradual increase” in workers’ comp claims, the average cost per claim in fact fell after the policy change—as did patient use of prescription drugs, especially opioids and other painkillers. The report, from the nonprofit Workers […]
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