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Purdue Pharma has agreed to pay over 0 million to settle a historic lawsuit brought by the Oklahoma attorney general who accused the OxyContin maker of aggressively marketing the opioid painkiller and fueling a drug epidemic that left thousands dead in the state, a source familiar with the case tells CNN.The settlement which was first reported by 364
Research from Washington State University suggests cannabis could be used to relieve headaches, university researchers said in the Journal of Pain.According to the research, inhaled cannabis reduces self-reported headache severity by 47.3% and migraine severity by 49.6%. According to Washington State, the study was the first to use big data from headache and migraine patients using cannabis in real time. “We were motivated to do this study because a substantial number of people say they use cannabis for headache and migraine, but surprisingly few studies had addressed the topic,” said Carrie Cuttler, a Washington State University assistant professor of psychology, the lead author on the paper.Cuttler did caution that there could be a placebo effect, and that further research is needed.“I suspect there are some slight overestimates of effectiveness,” said Cuttler. “My hope is that this research will motivate researchers to take on the difficult work of conducting placebo-controlled trials. In the meantime, this at least gives medical cannabis patients and their doctors a little more information about what they might expect from using cannabis to manage these conditions.”The study also found no significant difference between the effectiveness of THC and CBD, two active ingredients in cannabis.One prior study indicated that cannabis was more effective than ibuprofen in reducing headaches, but that study used nabilone, a synthetic cannabinoid drug. 1480
SACRAMENTO, Cali. -- A woman in California is recovering after being impaled in the leg by a large metal bar that fell off a big truck while traveling on the highway, according to officials.The unnamed victim was riding in a car on Highway 99 in Sacramento on Saturday, when the metal bar fell off of the truck in front of them, authorities said."The metal bar then bounced up and entered the right front of the Chevy, traveled through the engine compartment and entered the passenger compartment of the Chevy and impaled the right leg of the right front passenger," the California Highway Patrol's South Sacramento division said 642
School officials and a food service company want to rehire a lunchroom employee who was fired for allowing a student in New Hampshire to take food without paying.But the former worker says she won't take their offer."They're not doing it for me, they are doing it to save face," said Bonnie Kimball, the former lunchroom employee.Kimball was fired in April after a student at Mascoma Valley Regional High School in Canaan, New Hampshire, told her he didn't have money to pay for the items in his lunch tray. She says she let him take the food for free and the boy paid his lunch tab the next morning.In a statement Friday, the company said it decided to rehire Kimball and will be paying her back for the work she missed."We had a recent situation where an employee violated school and company policy in dealing with our food service and our district manager made a decision he felt was right at the time," said Brian Stone, president of the company's school division.She was accused of violating the procedures of Café Services -- the food services company that employed her -- as well as federal and school policies, according to a termination letter that Kimball provided to CNN.Kimball had worked at Mascoma Valley Regional High School for more than four years, according to the 1298
Radioactivity was detected on the oven, vacuum filter and bone crusher of an Arizona crematory where a deceased man who'd received radiation therapy was incinerated, according to a new case report. Worse still, a radioactive compound unrelated to the dead man was detected in the urine of an employee there."It is plausible that the crematory operator was exposed while cremating other human remains," Dr. Nathan Yu of the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix and his co-authors wrote in the 529