You cannot get a prescription for marijuana here in the US, or in any county in the world. What is called medical marijuana is merely a note from a doctor that allows their patient to purchase marijuana in a legal manner. The note just allows them not to be arrested. It is not a prescription. For it to be a prescription it would have to be a regulated substance by the FDA, and clearly it is not. There are doctors that give their cancer or epilepsy patients a note that makes it legal for them to posses it, but it is not a prescription.
Yes. but the condition you are prescribed medical marijuana in the first place should be cause for a discharge anyway.
No, they can't.
Smoke prescribed marijuana.
death
Marijuana is specifically prescribed to people undergoing chemotherapy. Talk to your doctor and see if medical marijuana is legal where you live.
Yes, marijuana can be prescribed as a medicine in certain areas.
If that "medication" is marijuana, then yes.
This comes from the White House: "Marijuana legalization for any purpose is a non-starter in the Obama administration." Also "The costs of legalizing marijuana would outweigh any possible tax that could be levied." As for medical marijuana, federally the only thing close to marijuana that you can be prescribed is Marinol which comes in the form of a pill or liquid. Some state governments allow actual marijuana to be prescribed but anyone participating in the use of it, even though prescribed can be punished by federal law. So the answer is no.
yes
When used it increases pressure around the eye.
Not for everyone, but for most people, yes. Marijuana is commonly prescribed to treat nausea and increase appetite in cancer and AIDS patients.
There's no problem with that. They are prescribed marijuana to treat a disease or condition that they have. It's legal.