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No, because I require prescriptions that would earn me a death sentence there.
You might want to get a better doctor. Cannabis has been found to be ineffective for most of the conditions it's prescribed for. The very few that it has shown effectiveness for have better treatment options available. https://www.uclahealth.org/news/release/evidence-lacking-medical-cannabis-most-conditions
No, it hasn't.
Cannabis has been proven to be a very effective treatment for nausea and seizures and more (as your source clearly indicates immediately).
Reading is hard ¯\(ツ)/¯
Also, studies were quite impossible until recently (with the relaxation of The Drug War). We're still learning about the efficacy.
Regardless, cannabis has been an effective treatment for many medical issues for centuries for a reason, as we are still discovering, as your source clearly indicates.
From the very beginning of the linked article: "Medical cannabis lacks adequate scientific backing for most of the conditions it is commonly used to treat"
Reading is hard, as you say.
Not "very" and not for "nausea and seizures" in general. It has shown effectiveness specifically for "chemotherapy-induced nausea" and "certain severe pediatric seizure disorders such as Dravet syndrome and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome" according to the very article that you claim to have read. For more, Dr. Chung explains
"Recently, cannabidiol (CBD) is the one that showed efficacy, but people tend to extend that into any other epilepsy.... It is confined, as evidence suggests, to those 2 syndromes, but not other types of epilepsy."
The standard of care treatment for chemotherapy induced nausea is antiemetics. More recently, Dravet Syndrome can be treated with Zorevunerson with over 90% efficacy. This is without the risk of cannabis associated psychotic symptoms. I have personally witnessed a smart kid at a top university succumb to debilitating marijuana induced schizophrenia and get banned from campus as a safety risk. That is not a side effect that patients should accept.
Mercury was a mainstay in medicine for treating syphilis, constipation, and infections (using calomel) from the 16th to 20th centuries, often causing severe toxicity. Medical science is a relatively new concept. Doctors didn't start sterilizing their instruments until the late 19th century.