• A friendly and supportive community, register today. Our forums use a separate account system.

UK Thousands of Brits prescribed super-strength CANNABIS for mental health conditions including anxiety and depression - with benefits claimants offered

Thousand of Britons are being prescribed super-strength cannabis for anxiety and depression.

Despite experts warning of the dangers, private clinics are handing it out after just one video consultation and boast the powerful drug can be 'delivered directly to the patient's door via a next-day service'.

Amid an epidemic of cannabis use on our streets, a Daily Mail audit has found specialist pharmacies are prescribing almost 10,000 different products - including ultra-strong strains imported from Amsterdam with names such as Ghost Train Haze, Dante's Inferno and White Widow.

Benefits claimants signed off work with mental health problems are offered free consultations and up to 20 per cent off the cost of the drug.

NHS prescriptions are tightly controlled, but dozens of private clinics are handing out 99 per cent of the medical cannabis in Britain.

Marijuana - which the NHS warns greatly increases the risk of severe mental health problems - is routinely being prescribed privately for mental health conditions including anxiety, depression, OCD, mood disorders and ADHD.

Illegal smokers of the drug are even encouraged to contact clinics 'to see if your usage could be legitimised' with a prescription.

The whole process is, shockingly, perfectly legal, thanks to loopholes in the law.

Thousands of Britons are now being prescribed super-strength cannabis for mental health conditions including anxiety and depression - despite the NHS warning that it can increase the risk of mental health problems

Thousands of Britons are now being prescribed super-strength cannabis for mental health conditions including anxiety and depression - despite the NHS warning that it can increase the risk of mental health problems.

Leading psychiatrist Professor Sir Robin Murray, of King's College London, described it as an ‘outrageous situation’

Leading psychiatrist Professor Sir Robin Murray, of King's College London, described it as an 'outrageous situation'.

The huge rise in high-strength medical cannabis handed out in the past few years raises fears that it is contributing to an increase in drug-induced mental health problems and psychosis that is hammering an overstretched NHS and putting extra strain on police forces.

The de facto legalisation of the drug - with police told not to arrest people for cannabis possession if there are 'justifiable grounds' for believing it could be for medical use - has raised concerns that companies exploiting lax regulations have created a pseudo-recreational market.

article image

Data obtained under the Freedom of Information Act shows there were 88,214 unlicensed cannabis products prescribed privately in the first two months of 2025, the most recent data available.

In 2024, there were 659,293 unlicensed cannabis products prescribed - equivalent to almost ten tons of weed - up from 282,920 in 2023, data from the NHS Business Services Authority shows.

Sir Robin Murray, professor of psychiatric research at King's College London, described it as 'outrageous'. He said the rising strength of the products posed 'an increased risk of dependence and psychiatric side-effects', adding: 'There are no randomised controlled trials showing that cannabis benefits psychiatric disorders and a lot of evidence that it causes them. It's a bit like taking alcohol for depression - some people find it helps in the short term but in the long-term it makes things worse.'

Data from one of the largest private clinics, Mamedica®, shows that 50.5 per cent of its more than 12,000 patients in the UK are prescribed cannabis for mental health conditions. If this is consistent across the industry, tens of thousands are being prescribed medical cannabis for a mental health condition.

Some private clinics offer free consultations and cut-price 'weed' to benefits claimants.

Tory health spokesman Stuart Andrew last night called on the Government to act on the Mail's 'extremely concerning' findings. He said: 'Ministers must act to tackle this abuse of the system.'

Data obtained under the freedom of information act shows that the total volume of weed prescribed in the UK increased from 2.7 million grams in 2022 to 9.8 million grams - almost ten tonnes - in 2024 (Stock image)

A number of private cannabis clinics offer free consultations and cut-price weed to Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment (PIP) claimants.

Medical cannabis was legalised in 2018 after a campaign to make it available to children with severe epilepsy. Licensed products - which do not contain the whole plant - can be prescribed on the NHS for severe epilepsy, nausea from chemotherapy, or for muscle spasms caused by multiple sclerosis.

But private clinics can legally prescribe unlicensed products, which have not been through strictly controlled medical trials.
Dozens of specialist pharmacies offer products with a THC (the psychoactive ingredient) content of more than 30 per cent. Freedom of Information data shows that the volume prescribed increased from 2.7million grams in 2022 to 9.8million grams in 2024.

It also shows there has been an increase in the number of people being prescribed higher-potency cannabis. The most popular potency in 2022 was between 18 and 22 per cent THC, but in the first two months of 2025, products above 22 per cent made up almost half of prescriptions.

Mamedica said it prescribed based on a 'strictly regulated clinical and legal framework', with all prescriptions issued by a registered doctor in accordance with Home Office, MHRA and CQC and requirements. A spokesman said: 'Prescribing takes place on a named-patient basis by specialist clinicians and operates under established medicines law and regulatory oversight.

'Mental health is one of the most common reasons patients seek specialist care after conventional treatments have failed. Patients presenting with conditions such as anxiety, PTSD and depression are assessed individually and managed under strict safeguarding and shared-care protocols.'

A government spokesman said: 'We expect regulators to crack down on those private providers who prescribe to patients without the proper clinical care they need.

'More widely, we're also looking at private prescribing to ensure patients have access to high-quality medicines through all legal routes.'

 
Propaganda for the establishment as always. In their eyes we are cows who are being farmed and their goal is for us to give up our time and energy for as little as possible in return.

Heavy favouring of 'benefits claimants' type language, 'work dodging' type stuff.

They want the easily led folks who read it to start abusing us online and in the street. Back to work serfs, you don't need medication you need LABOUR for a pittance

This kind of thing is expected unfortunately but it means we are getting somewhere I think personally

The backlash means we must be moving forward 🤷‍♂️
New post automatically merged:

Of course a certain clinic virtually handing it out is not helping us in this...
 
Last edited:
And so it begins. Get used to this chaps.

The more common MC becomes the more common attacks like this will be as we try to defeat stigma. There are plenty of wealthy people who don't want MC here of a million different reasons.

I suspect some of those people are now getting their knickers in a twist and pulling strings for smear campaigns.

On the back of yesterday's discussion, can you imagine how the Daily Mail would paint Medicann. It would end our credibility with the public.
 
Propaganda for the establishment as always. In their eyes we are cows who are being farmed and their goal is for us to give up our time and energy for as little as possible in return.

Heavy favouring of 'benefits claimants' type language, 'work dodging' type stuff.

They want the easily led folks who read it to start abusing us online and in the street. Back to work serfs, you don't need medication you need LABOUR for a pittance

This kind of thing is expected unfortunately but it means we are getting somewhere I think personally

The backlash means we must be moving forward 🤷‍♂️
New post automatically merged:

Tha reporters at that filthy rag only employs those that have qualified at The Goerring School of Journalism
 
What a sad article.

Anyone know if I can get some of this discount weed. I don't get pip but I do get Attendance Allowance £110 per week for having stage 4 terminal cancer. I spend most of this on weed. Saving a few quid would be nice.
 
What a sad article.

Anyone know if I can get some of this discount weed. I don't get pip but I do get Attendance Allowance £110 per week for having stage 4 terminal cancer. I spend most of this on weed. Saving a few quid would be nice.
The 20% took my mind to this clinic below but the news article doesn't mention veterans and others but it wouldn't.

1768053112908.png
 
The 20% took my mind to this clinic below but the news article doesn't mention veterans and others but it wouldn't.

1768053112908.png
I'm a pensioner on state pension, so there is a chance that i can get %18 discount.
Thanks for this I will have a look into it.
 
It's the DM, it's not really surprising. I do occasionally peruse the website, but it's not much of a cut above the other tabloids.

I saw the whole article bashing patients and the usual sensationalistic take on a serious subject. Plus dragging out a bunch of anti cannabis experts. Why can't they do a story on cannabis being given to a child that suffers 100 seizures a day and actually making it possible for them to have a life outside of trying not to die on a daily basis. A news story that is positive instead of the usual Trumpist style negativity.
 
It's the DM, it's not really surprising. I do occasionally peruse the website, but it's not much of a cut above the other tabloids.

I saw the whole article bashing patients and the usual sensationalistic take on a serious subject. Plus dragging out a bunch of anti cannabis experts. Why can't they do a story on cannabis being given to a child that suffers 100 seizures a day and actually making it possible for them to have a life outside of trying not to die on a daily basis. A news story that is positive instead of the usual Trumpist style negativity.

We know why they won't run a story like that, none of us will read it and there's no shock value to remember where you read it.

It's a real shame, I stopped reading tabloids after I became aware of Hillsborough. I think they're all as bad as eachother. Not that broadsheets are much better these days either.

What ever happened to investigative journalism? Or has that always been a myth.
 
Looking at the science behind it all isnt cannabis alot safer than ssris with how ineffective they can be and cannabis having a better advantage long term.

A potential problem as to why antidepressants have limited efficacy is that they act by increasing monoamine levels, although individuals with depression do not suffer lower levels of these neurotransmitters

Cannabis works more efficiently through GABA
 
Back
Top