Overriding the Governor's Veto, Vermont Lawmakers Expand Access to Overdose Prevention Centers
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Vermont now becomes the third state to defy federal law and authorize OPCs.
90 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Vermont now becomes the third state to defy federal law and authorize OPCs.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
A high‐quality comparative effectiveness study.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
What youth vaping epidemic?
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Nicotine prohibition begets more potent forms of nicotine.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
The author is more concerned about doctor's national origin than about patients' access to health care.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Policymakers always fight the last battle while drug trafficking organizations open new fronts.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Opposing the drug war should entail supporting reasonable public nuisance laws.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
The culture war is not all that animates those opposing lab‐grown meat. Another factor is good old‐fashioned protectionism.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Overdose prevention centers (OPCs) have been saving lives and preventing disease since the 1980s.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Re‐scheduling cannabis as Schedule 3 doesn't go far enough. The DEA should de‐schedule cannabis.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Aside from criminal justice concerns, singling out menthol tobacco for a ban lacks a basis in scientific evidence.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
When cops practice medicine, overdoses increase, drug cartels get richer, and patients suffer.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
By recriminalizing SSPs, Idaho lawmakers appear to prioritize preventing people from using illicit drugs over preventing them from dying due to illicit drug use.
Blog: Reason.com
Dr. Jack Kevorkian leaves the courtroom after he was convicted of second degree murder in Oakland County Circuit Court, March 26, 1999.
Blog: Cato at Liberty
Hopefully, the trend that Tennessee lawmakers started last year to make it easier for competent and experienced doctors in other countries who migrate to the United States to provide care to its residents will continue.