Health & wellness
BY DANICA LLOYD & RYAN REYNOLDS
Health & Wellness Edition 2025
Readers, welcome to your annual CI Health & Wellness Edition! This brand new guide features the latest updates and resources on health and wellness in your community. All of the stories were written by our team of local journalists. This year’s cover story looks at the growing popularity of Glucagon-like peptide 1 drugs, which can be prescribed to treat Type 2 Diabetes or obesity. In this article, we discuss this trend with local physicians and learn more about what the rise of GLP-1 drugs means for both patients and the doctors who offer bariatric surgeries for weight loss. Also in this issue, we feature a local mental health care provider, The Mind Connection, which offers microcurrent neurofeedback—a natural treatment that helps the brain rebalance and reorganize itself to heal various mental health conditions. At the state level, we’ve also included articles that look at upcoming legislation that could lead to stricter food safety standards and a total ban on all forms of THC in Texas. We hope you find this new guide useful and informative.
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Texas considers banning cannabis
What’s next
In testimony to the Texas Senate on behalf of the Texas Medical Association, Texas Pediatric Society and Texas Public Health Coalition, Austin-area physician Dr. Robert Emmick said he believes there’s not enough research to know how these products impact adolescents. “Kids can get [cannabis products] in all kinds of places—grocery stores, convenience stores, … literally across the street from schools in some cases,” said Betsy Jones, director of policy and strategy at Texans for Safe and Drug-Free Youth. Patrick said state Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, will file Senate Bill 3 to ban all forms of THC in Texas. “This bill will have broad bipartisan support in the Senate, and I trust the House will also see the danger of these products and pass this bill with overwhelming support so it can become law immediately,” Patrick said.
Efforts to ban all forms of THC are now underway in Texas, per a Dec. 4 news release from Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who said some retailers have “exploited” state law and are making unregulated products easily accessible. “Since 2023, thousands of stores selling hazardous THC products have popped up,” he said in the release. “Many sell products ... [with] three to four times the THC content which might be found in marijuana purchased from a drug dealer.” Nico Richardson, CEO of the medical marijuana dispensary Texas Original, said there were about 1,948 Texas retail stores offering hemp products in 2020. By the end of 2024, the Texas Department of State Health Services had 7,970 registered hemp retailers. State officials at a May 29 Texas Senate hearing said product testing is expensive, and it would take years to reach every retailer with current staffing.
How we got here 2015
2015: Texas passes Senate Bill 339, which launched a medical marijuana program in 2017 2018: Federal Farm Bill passes, legalizing the commercial production of hemp 2019: Texas passes House Bill 1325, legalizing the sale of hemp-derived products with less than 0.3% THC 2021: Texas Department of State Health Services attempts to ban delta-8; the case is awaiting a final decision from the Texas Supreme Court 2024: Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick announces intentions to ban all THC products in Texas 2025: 89th Texas Legislature convenes Jan. 14-June 2
2020
2025
SOURCES: TEXAS LEGISLATURE ONLINE, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES, TEXAS ORIGINAL, TEXAS STATE LAW LIBRARY/COMMUNITY IMPACT
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