If you are prescribed medical cannabis, work can feel awkward before anything has actually gone wrong. You may be worried about drug testing, smell, safety-critical duties, HR records, privacy, or whether a manager will understand that prescribed cannabis is not the same thing as non-prescribed use.
The useful answer is this: a prescription matters, but it does not remove every workplace boundary. Employers still need to manage health and safety. Patients still need to avoid working while impaired. Some jobs have extra safety, regulatory, safeguarding or contractual rules. Disclosure is therefore a practical decision, not a one-size-fits-all script.
This guide is for UK patients preparing for a work conversation. It is not legal advice, it does not tell you what to disclose in a specific job, and it does not replace an employment adviser, union representative, occupational health clinician, pharmacist, prescriber or solicitor. For related MCPH context, read medical cannabis and driving in the UK and medical cannabis side effects and interactions.
The short answer
Think about three separate questions:
- could your medicine affect concentration, reaction time, judgement, balance, alertness or communication at work?
- does your role involve driving, machinery, working at height, clinical care, safeguarding, security, lone working or other safety-critical duties?
- would your employer need information to consider reasonable adjustments, occupational health advice, sickness absence, drug testing or fitness for work?
If the answer to any of these is yes, plan the conversation before there is a problem. Speak with your clinic or pharmacist about impairment, ask what documentation they can provide, and keep the discussion focused on fitness for work and reasonable adjustments rather than cannabis culture or product details.
Do not assume a prescription gives workplace clearance. Do not assume every employer can ask for every private medical detail. The middle ground is usually a documented, need-to-know conversation.
Impairment matters more than labels
NHS medical cannabis guidance lists possible side effects including dizziness, feeling very tired, mood or behavioural change, hallucinations and other effects. GOV.UK drug-driving guidance also makes the wider principle clear for medicines: legal or prescribed medicines can still be a problem if they impair driving.
Work is not the same as driving law, but the practical lesson is similar. The issue is not just whether the medicine is prescribed. It is whether you can do the task safely at that time.
This matters most where the work involves:
- driving for work or commuting as part of the job;
- operating machinery, tools, vehicles or heavy equipment;
- working at height, near hazards or in isolated settings;
- clinical, care, childcare, education or safeguarding responsibilities;
- security, emergency response, weapons, controlled areas or regulated sites;
- high-consequence decisions where slowed reaction or reduced attention could harm someone.
If you notice drowsiness, slowed thinking, poor coordination, anxiety, altered perception or reduced confidence, treat that as a safety signal. Contact your clinic if the pattern is new, stronger than expected, or affecting work.
Disclosure is not one rule for every patient
Some patients may never need to discuss the medicine with work because they take it outside working hours and it does not affect their duties. Others may need a clear plan because their role is safety-critical, they need adjustments, they may be drug tested, or they need to carry medicine during the working day.
Reasonable adjustments are usually about the underlying health condition and work disadvantage, not about giving an employer a detailed tour of your treatment. Acas explains that reasonable adjustments are changes an employer makes to remove or reduce a disadvantage related to disability, and that what is reasonable depends on the situation.
Practical examples of questions to consider before disclosure:
- Do I need an adjustment to hours, breaks, duties, travel, storage or attendance?
- Would occupational health help translate medical information into workplace recommendations?
- Does my contract, handbook, regulator or site policy mention medicines, controlled drugs, fitness for duty or drug testing?
- Can my clinic provide a brief letter confirming I am prescribed a medicine without unnecessary clinical detail?
- Do I need advice from a union, employment adviser or solicitor before sharing details?
This article cannot tell you whether to disclose in a particular role. It can help you prepare a safer, cleaner conversation.
What to keep documented
Keep your medical cannabis evidence organised before you need it. NHS guidance says patients should keep medicine in its original packaging because the dispensing label contains important information, and should also keep a copy of the prescription and a letter from the prescribing doctor if they have one.
For work purposes, useful documents may include:
- original pharmacy packaging with dispensing label;
- copy of your prescription or clinic portal prescription summary;
- brief clinic letter confirming the prescription and prescriber details;
- ID that matches the prescription information;
- occupational health report, if one is arranged;
- emails confirming agreed adjustments or fitness-for-work arrangements.
Keep copies private and share only what is necessary for the purpose. If an employer asks for more medical information than seems relevant, pause and get advice.
Drug testing and workplace policies
Some workplaces use drug and alcohol policies. HSE guidance tells employers to manage health and safety risk around drug and alcohol misuse at work and to develop policies where relevant. A workplace policy may also cover prescription medicines, impairment, testing, reporting duties and safety-critical work.
A positive cannabis test is not the same as a complete workplace assessment. It may not show current impairment, and it may not distinguish a prescribed patient from someone using unlawfully. But it can still trigger a process under a workplace policy. That is why documentation and early advice matter.
Before a test or policy issue becomes urgent, check:
- what the policy says about prescribed controlled medicines;
- who receives medical information and how it is kept confidential;
- whether occupational health is involved before disciplinary decisions;
- what evidence the employer accepts for prescribed medication;
- how safety-critical duties are handled while a review is happening.
Do not rely on informal reassurance from a colleague. Ask for the policy in writing.
What to ask your clinic or prescriber
The clinic cannot certify every workplace situation. It can still help you understand the medicine side of the risk.
Useful questions include:
- Which side effects could affect work, driving, concentration or coordination?
- What should I do if I feel impaired during working hours?
- Can you provide a factual prescription letter for HR or occupational health?
- Are there warning signs that mean I need urgent review?
- Are there interactions with other medicines, alcohol or shift-work patterns that I should raise?
- Is there anything my employer needs to know for safe storage or carrying at work?
Keep the question about safety and documentation. Do not ask the clinic to promise that a particular role, shift or task is suitable for you.
A practical disclosure script
If you decide to raise it, a calm starting point might be:
“I have a health condition and I am prescribed a controlled medicine by a specialist clinician. I want to make sure I follow the workplace policy and remain fit for work. Could we handle this through occupational health or the relevant HR process?”
You do not need to lead with product names, dose details or cannabis terminology if the first step is simply occupational health or a policy check. If more detail is needed, share it through the proper route and keep a written record.
What this article is not saying
This article is not saying you must disclose medical cannabis to every employer. It is not saying a prescription protects you from every workplace policy. It is not saying employers can ignore disability law, privacy or reasonable adjustments.
It is saying that work, impairment and prescribed cannabis need a careful paper trail. The safest route is usually to understand your medicine, know your role’s risk level, keep prescription proof organised, use occupational health where appropriate, and get legal or employment advice before high-stakes decisions.
Sources
- NHS: Medical cannabis
- GOV.UK: Drug driving law
- Acas: Reasonable adjustments at work
- HSE: Managing drug and alcohol misuse at work
- HSE: Employers’ duties in protecting disabled people
- GMC: Information for doctors on cannabis-based products for medicinal use
- CQC: Cannabis-based medicinal products: what we look at when we register and inspect
Where to go next
- Patient Guide – start from the main MCPH pathway hub.
- How the UK medical cannabis prescription process works – Related MCPH guide
- Are there any side effects from CBD? – Related MCPH guide
- Medical cannabis side effects: what UK patients should know – Related MCPH guide
- Patient Guide – Main pathway hub