Skip to main contentSkip to navigation Close dialogue1/3 Next image Previous image Toggle captionSkip to navigation Oliver Robinson, 34, killed himself in November 2023. Photograph: Family handout View image in fullscreen Oliver Robinson, 34, killed himself in November 2023. Photograph: Family handout ‘Should never have been prescribed’: private UK cannabis clinics face call for tighter regulationFamily pushing for greater controls after inquest finds Oliver Robinson’s prescription was ‘obstacle’ to proper care Oliver Robinson felt he had exhausted conventional therapies when he left the Priory, a private mental health facility where he was treated for depression and addiction between 2019 and 2022. Initially he found relief from a new kind of prescription elsewhere. But by the time he took his own life in November 2023, aged 34, his family believe his medicine was making him worse.In January, an inquest concluded that Robinson’s prescription for medicinal cannabis had “probably contributed to his death”. Catherine McKenna, the coroner for Manchester North, also ruled that his continued use of the prescription, first issued to him in May 2022 by Curaleaf Clinic, a private cannabis provider, “acted as an obstacle” to him receiving appropriate psychiatric and addiction care. His family understand this to be the first ruling of its kind.Now, Oliver’s brother, Alexander Robinson, is launching a campaign for tighter controls on UK private cannabis…
Published: March 31, 2026 12:51 pm
Source: theguardian.com — Read original