Categories: Uncategorized

6 People in Massachusetts Reportedly Sick After Using Vapes From Licensed Source

Health officials in Massachusetts revealed this week that six patients have suffered illnesses likely linked to marijuana vaping products purchased from dispensaries. Those reports, which are unconfirmed, are alarming, given that they stem from regulated products, and not those purchased from the illicit market. 

The reported illnesses also come a week before Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker is slated to lift a temporary ban on all vaping products. Baker issued an emergency order banning the products back in September amid a nationwide epidemic that saw dozens of individuals die and thousands more fall seriously ill from vaping. Three vaping-related fatalities have occurred in Massachusetts. 

“One of the experts said that, ‘We don’t have time to wait. People are getting sick and the time to act is now.’ I couldn’t agree more,” Baker said at the time.

The temporary ban is set to be lifted on December 11, although it will come with new restrictions governing the sale of e-cigarettes and other vaping products that were etched out in legislation signed by Baker. The governor’s administration also said that the state Department of Health will present new regulations surrounding the sale of vaping products on the same date. 

According to the state government website, the new legislation signed by Baker “includes a number of restrictions on the sale of tobacco products, including limiting the sale of flavored nicotine vaping products to licensed smoking bars where they may only be smoked on-site,” while also giving the Department of Health “new authority to regulate the sale of nicotine vaping products, to ensure the public is informed about the potential dangers of vaping and to implement other provisions of the law in order to protect the public health.” 

The six new illnesses reportedly stemming from regulated marijuana vaping products remain shrouded in mystery. The Boston Herald reported that the state health department “did not specify which products were linked to the six cases or which dispensaries they were purchased from, leaving marijuana users with little answers as to whether the vapes they legally purchased, before the ban, are safe.” 

That prompted Shaleen Title, a commissioner at the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission, to call for more information.
“Obviously, some urgent next questions here: What products did they report using/from where? Did they also report using unregulated products?” Title tweeted Friday. “Looking forward to working further with MA health officials and grateful for their collaboration toward our common goal of public health.”

The post 6 People in Massachusetts Reportedly Sick After Using Vapes From Licensed Source appeared first on High Times.

Jason

Share
Published by
Jason

Recent Posts

Light It Up: Why NORML Still Matters in the 21st Century

Let’s be real: cannabis culture in 2026 looks nothing like it did even a decade…

13 hours ago

Alcohol Is Fun. Hangovers Suck. Here’s What I Drink Instead.

A first-person review of the hemp-derived THC cocktail base I poured at our Cannabis Cup…

2 days ago

Every Roll of Paper You’ve Touched Comes From a French Invention. The English Took the Credit.

Every paper mill in the world still runs on the continuous-web design a Frenchman patented…

2 days ago

[Movie Trailer] ‘Cannesabis: Disclosure Night’: The Martians Came to Cannes for the Movies. They Brought Weed.

A new AI-assisted sci-fi satire from filmmaker Dan Levy Dagerman and the Space Weed Universe…

2 days ago

The Telltale Spark: Spain Dismantled 1,850 Indoor Cannabis Grows by Tracking Illegal Power Hookups in 2025

Spain has increased penalties for electricity theft linked to indoor cannabis cultivation after Endesa reported…

2 days ago

It’s Never Too Late to Grow Fire

How a 52-year-old first-time grower turned trial and error into a show-stopping harvest The first…

2 days ago