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Experts explore issues, controversies around medical marijuana use


 


In terms of law enforcement issues, roadside sobriety tests have not been validated for marijuana use, and plasma levels of the drug drop within minutes of use. “The alcohol model works well with alcohol, but cannabis is not alcohol.”

Deborah Hasin, PhD, professor of epidemiology (psychiatry) at Columbia University, New York, talked about trends of cannabis use in the United States. “Looking at states before and after legalization, we see that there is an increase in both cannabis use and cannabis disorders in adults.” Adolescents, however, are not smoking more, and rates have not increased in states where marijuana has been legalized for medical or recreational use. “Kids are just not socializing; they are in their bedrooms with their smartphones. Depression is increasing in teens, but substance abuse is not.”

The last speaker was Deepak Cyril D’Souza, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Yale University, who talked about cannabis and psychosis. He defined three distinct relationships: acute transient psychosis that resolves fairly quickly, acute persistent psychosis that takes days or weeks to resolve, and psychotic reactions that are associated with recurrent psychotic symptoms. Studies suggest that those who have a psychotic reaction to marijuana are at elevated risk of being diagnosed with schizophrenia later, and that timing of exposure to marijuana may be important.

Dr. Dinah Miller is coauthor with Annette Hanson, MD, of “Committed: The Battle Over Involuntary Psychiatric Care”

Dr. Dinah Miller

In patients with psychotic disorders who are actively being treated with antipsychotics, Dr. D’Souza found that giving tetrahydrocannabinol intravenously increases the symptoms of schizophrenia, even if the patient has the perception that marijuana is helpful. “There was a mismatch between what the patient reported and what we observed.”

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