Is Cannabis Used as PartĀ ofĀ Palliative Dementia Care?Ā
As dementia progresses to advanced stages, palliative care focuses on comfort, dignity, and symptom relief. Families often ask whether medical cannabis can be used to ease distress, anxiety, or pain at the end of life. While the UK permits specialist prescribing of cannabis-based medicinal products (CBPMs), their use in dementia palliative care remainsĀ limited and highly regulated.Ā
Understanding Palliative Dementia Care
Palliative dementia care aims to relieve symptoms such as agitation, pain, sleep disruption, and loss of appetite. NICE dementia guidance (NG97) and end-of-life care standards encourage non-drug approaches first, including environmental support and carer reassurance. When medicines are used, they should be reviewed frequently to balance comfort and alertness.
Medical cannabis is sometimes discussed in this context, particularly where conventional options like opioids or sedatives cause excessive drowsiness. However, it is not an approved palliative therapy for dementia under current NHS or NICE recommendations.
What The Evidence Shows
A 2024 review in Age and Ageing found that older adults using CBD-dominant cannabis oils under supervision experienced modest improvements in anxiety and sleep, but data on end-of-life care were scarce (Age and Ageing, 2024).
Similarly, a 2025 PubMed Central study on adults aged 65 and over found that low-dose, medically supervised cannabis did not impair cognition or worsen behavioural symptoms (PubMed Central, 2025). However, neither study examined hospice or dementia palliative contexts directly.
The Alzheimerās Society notes that while cannabis may appear to calm restlessness or aid sleep, there is insufficient evidence to recommend it routinely for advanced dementia.
Clinical Framework and Ethical Oversight
Under the Misuse of Drugs Regulations 2001, CBPMs are Schedule 2 controlled drugs, meaning they can only be prescribed by a specialist doctor and must be recorded and stored according to controlled-drug standards (NHS England, 2023).
Palliative teams may discuss cannabis use for coexisting conditions such as chronic pain, but any prescription requires multidisciplinary review, informed consent under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, and family involvement.
Clinical Bottom Line
- Cannabis isĀ not approvedĀ for palliative use in dementia.Ā
- Limited research suggests potential comfort benefits, but evidence remains weak.Ā
- Only specialist doctors can prescribe CBPMs under controlled conditions.Ā
- Care decisions must prioritise safety, comfort, and consent.Ā
Educational Context: AlleviMed
AlleviMed provides educational material explaining how medical cannabis eligibility and regulation apply within palliative and long-term care frameworks. It helps families understand how such products are assessed legally and clinically before any potential use.
Takeaway
Cannabis is not part of routine palliative dementia care in the UK. While early studies show some promise for easing anxiety or restlessness, more evidence is needed. The focus of palliative care remains compassion, comfort, and dignity guided by careful clinical supervision and family collaboration.

