More Than A Fifth Of People Who Use Cannabis Struggle With Dependency Or Problematic Use, Study Indicates

The New York Times (8/29, Richtel) reports, “More than one-fifth of people who use cannabis struggle with dependency or problematic use, according to” findings published online Aug. 29 in JAMA Network Open. The study, which “drew its data from nearly 1,500 primary care patients in Washington State, where recreational use is legal, in an effort to explore the prevalence of cannabis use disorder among both medical and nonmedical users,” revealed that “21 percent of people in the study had some degree of cannabis use disorder, which clinicians characterize broadly as problematic use of cannabis that leads to a variety of symptoms, such as recurrent social and occupational problems, indicating impairment and distress.”
       
According to CNN (8/29, LaMotte), “using both medical and recreational weed led to a more severe addiction than using medical marijuana alone, the study” concluded. This study’s findings mirror those “from other countries such as the Netherlands, Germany, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland and France.” In fact, “a 2020 meta-analysis of those countries and the US found 22% of cannabis users would develop a cannabis disorder during their lifetime – the risk rose to 33% for younger people who engaged in weekly or daily use of weed.”

Related Links:

— “Cannabis Use Disorder Is ‘Common’ Among Marijuana Users, Study Finds,”Matt Richtel, The New York Times, August 29, 2023

Posted in In The News.