President-elect Donald Trump has announced his intent to nominate physician and Fox News correspondent Janette Nesheiwat to become the next U.S. surgeon general. And as far as marijuana policy is concerned, she’s said that she’s “all for” the use of medical cannabis for certain conditions.
While Nesheiwat’s stance on broader reform is unclear, her social media posts and media appearances signal that she’s at least supportive of allowing access to medical marijuana for patients with conditions like seizure disorders or cancer. However, she’s also promoted research linking cannabis smoking to cardiovascular issues.
Citing a study last year, Nesheiwat said “if you use marijuana—whether you smoke marijuana or vape or use edibles—then you have an increased risk by about 25 percent of developing a heart attack, or about 42 percent increased risk of developing a stroke, which can leave you paralyzed or take your life.”
“Why is this? When you inhale marijuana, for example, you are inhaling particulate matter, which is causing inflammation to the blood vessels—inflammation and irritation to blood vessels to your heart, to your brain and to other organs in your body,” she said. “So you might want to think twice before you light up. Make sure you take care of yourself.”
In 2019, she also weighed in on a lung injury crisis that stemmed from contaminated vape cartridges containing “both nicotine and THC, the high-inducing chemical in marijuana.”
But in 2018, she expressed support for the use of medical cannabis, at least for select conditions. In response to a social media post calling for marijuana reform, she said “I’m all for medical marijuana. seizures, cancer patients etc.”
In 2021, Nesheiwat seemed to criticize the decision to suspend U.S. runner Sha’Carri Richardson from the Olympics over a positive THC test, challenging the idea that marijuana is a performance enhancing drug.
“Marijuana doesn’t makes you run faster. She did not use anabolic steroids. It was pot,” she said. “Let her run.”
While the surgeon general doesn’t play an especially direct role in policymaking around drugs, the position has served as a key messaging vehicle for White House health platforms.
Under the Biden administration in 2021, for example, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy weighed in on marijuana decriminalization, saying “I don’t think that there is value to individuals or to society to lock people up for marijuana use. I don’t think that serves anybody well.”
Meanwhile, Jerome Adams, the surgeon general under the first Trump administration, issued an advisory in 2019 that warned about the risks of using marijuana, particularly for pregnant women and adolescents. It also contained misleading statements about the cannabis legalization movement.
So far, the president-elect’s cabinet choices have run the gamut as far as their cannabis positions are concerned.
For example, the next head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) could be a vociferous opponent of marijuana reform if the former GOP Florida congressman that Trump selected for the job, Dave Weldon, is ultimately confirmed.
Trump’s pick to run the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is also a medical marijuana skeptic, promoting claims that cannabis use is linked to cardiovascular issues and mental health problems for youth. He has also suggested that marijuana is a gateway drug.
In contrast, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the president-elect’s choice for secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that oversees FDA, supports ending marijuana prohibition and legalizing certain psychedelics for therapeutic purposes.
Meanwhile, pro-legalization former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) was recently replaced by former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi (R), who opposed medical cannabis legalization in the state, as Trump’s choice to for U.S. attorney general.
A non-governmental advisory body that Trump is putting together will have two familiar names helming the ship: Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy. And while both are proponents of marijuana and psychedelics reform, giving hope to some reformers that the new entity will recommend scaling back the costly war on drugs, Ramaswamy has previously insisted on expanding the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).
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President-elect Donald Trump has announced his intent to nominate physician and Fox News correspondent Janette Nesheiwat to become the next U.S. surgeon general. And as far as marijuana policy is concerned, she’s said that she’s “all for” the use of medical cannabis for certain conditions. While Nesheiwat’s stance on broader reform is unclear, her social Read More