More patients than ever are asking how cannabis can help during and after breast cancer treatment. As a supportive oncology physician, I’ve heard these questions for years. It was frustrating not to have better answers. So I entered this research space. Patients were exploring cannabis on their own, and they were right to ask. People deserve medically sound, research-informed guidance.
Cannabis can be a supportive tool for managing chemotherapy-induced nausea, improving sleep, easing chronic pain, and reducing anxiety. International studies support these benefits, but U.S. research has lagged due to federal restrictions. Through Pennsylvania’s academic clinical research program, Thomas Jefferson University and Ethos Cannabis are working to close those knowledge gaps by collecting real-wor

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