Study of 4 Million Adults Links Cannabis Use to Quadrupled Type 2 Diabetes Risk
By
geox
Hand-rolled, kettle-boiled, baked to perfection. Worth every minute at the bakery.
Summary
A large-scale study analyzing data from over 4 million adults found that cannabis use is associated with an almost quadrupled risk of developing type 2 diabetes. The research was presented at the European Association for the Study of Diabetes annual meeting and represents one of the largest analyses examining the relationship between cannabis consumption and diabetes risk.
Key quotes
· 3 pulledCannabis use is linked to an almost quadrupling in the risk of developing diabetes
analysis of real-world data from over 4 million adults
being presented at the Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes
You might also wanna read
Genomic test trial suggests hormone therapy alone may be sufficient for low-risk breast cancer patients
A groundbreaking genomic test trial suggests that breast cancer patients with low test scores could be treated with hormone therapy alone, a

Study finds bird masturbation is natural behavior, not caused by captivity stress
A study on masturbation among birds, particularly parrots, finds that the behavior is natural and more common in the wild than in captivity.
Experimental pill daraxonrasib extends survival in advanced pancreatic cancer patients, study finds
Researchers reported that daraxonrasib, a novel experimental pill, helped patients with advanced pancreatic cancer live longer by blocking a
Lab-grown sperm from stem cells could help infertile men, but may require gene editing
A US start-up called Paterna Biosciences claims it can take stem cells from men's testes and grow them into sperm cells in the lab, potentia
Spinach-derived photosynthetic treatment shows promise for dry eye disease
Scientists at the National University of Singapore have developed an experimental treatment for dry eye disease that uses photosynthetic mac
Google's Debug program seeks EPA approval to release 64 million modified mosquitoes in California and Florida
Google's Debug program plans to release up to 64 million genetically modified "good" mosquitoes in California and Florida over two years to
