When NFL lineman Eugene Monroe spoke out publicly against the NFL?s ban on marijuana, it sparked a national conversation about the merits of cannabis as an alternative method of pain management for players.
?What I noticed was that former players would openly speak about their experiences being addicted to opioids that they were prescribed by their team doctors,? Monroe told Yahoo Global News Anchor Katie Couric.
Monroe, who was recently released by the Baltimore Ravens, has found an ally for his cause in Tennessee Titans linebacker Derrick Morgan.
In an exclusive interview, Morgan told Couric, ?I think for the NFL to say that cannabis does not benefit the long-term health of its players without actually having gone and done the research ? I don?t think that?s an accurate statement.?
The NFL says its Substances of Abuse policy is ?collectively bargained and is a joint NFL-NFL-Players Association program. We are guided by medical advisers. They have not indicated a need to change.?
Monroe and Morgan are both particularly interested in a cannabis compound called cannabidiol (CBD), which has been shown to be an effective treatment for certain epilepsy patients and has been classified by the U.S. government as a neuroprotectant.
?There?s been some extraordinary compelling, preclinical work that?s demonstrated that CBD is incredibly effective at helping to limit the extent of brain injury, which is really very intriguing and promising,? says Staci Gruber, Director of McLean Hospital?s MIND program and an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School
Morgan says, ?I feel like the NFL has a responsibility to look into it, to delegate time and money to research this for its players.?
NFL players like Monroe and Morgan are increasingly concerned about chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), the neurodegenerative disease that was highlighted in the movie ?Concussion? and has been discovered in the brain of many deceased players.
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