What has research over the past two decades revealed about the adverse health effects of recreational cannabis use
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Citations
Quelle est la place de la consommation de substances dans les troubles psychotiques émergents
Shifts in cannabis use at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic among Global Drug Survey respondents from 13 countries
Cannabinoids: Legal aspects, pharmacology, phytochemistry, probable targets from biological system, and therapeutic potential
Socio-economic factors associated with substance use across different waves of the COVID-19 pandemic: an intersectional analysis of a repeated cross-sectional survey
Differentiating heavy cannabis users through latent class analysis
References
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction
Cannabis use and risk of psychotic or affective mental health outcomes: a systematic review
A systematic review of the prevalence of schizophrenia.
Cannabis use in adolescence and risk for adult psychosis: longitudinal prospective study
Comparative epidemiology of dependence on tobacco, alcohol, controlled substances, and inhalants: Basic findings from the National Comorbidity Survey.
Related Papers (5)
Frequently Asked Questions (10)
Q2. How many times did a person who tried cannabis use a diagnosis of schizophrenia?
After statistical adjustment for a personal history of psychiatric disorder by age 18 and parental divorce, those who had used cannabis 10 or more times by age 18 were 2.3 times more likely to receive a diagnosis of schizophrenia than those who had not used cannabis.
Q3. What is the consistent finding in epidemiological studies of drug use in young adults?
The order of involvement with cannabis and other illicit drugs, and the increased likelihood of using other illicit drugs, are the most consistent findings in epidemiological studies of drug use in young adults.
Q4. What is the effect of cannabis on the risk of a car crash?
In summary, the epidemiological and laboratory evidence on the acute effects of cannabis strongly suggests that cannabis users who drive while intoxicated increase their risk of motor vehicle crashes 2-3 times [20] as against 6-15 times for comparable intoxicating doses of alcohol.
Q5. How much of the risk of failing to complete high school or post-secondary training was ?
The authors estimated that early use of cannabis contributed to 17% of the risk of failing to complete high school or post-secondary training.
Q6. How many times did conscripts who tried cannabis have schizophrenia?
Conscripts who had tried cannabis by age 18 were 2.4 times more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia over the next 15 years than those who had not [91].
Q7. What was the main reason for the lack of studies that reported increased rates of birth defects?
It was also difficult to interpret the few studies that did reported increased rates of birth defects (e.g [22]) because cannabis users were more likely to smoke tobacco, and use alcohol and other illicit drugs during pregnancy [23].
Q8. How many low income women have reported lower scores on the Stanford-Binet Intelligence?
In the past 20 years another cohort of low income women with higher rates of regular cannabis use [31] has reported lower scores on memory and verbal scales of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale at age 3 in children born to 655 low income women (half African-American and half Caucasian) in Pittsburgh between 1990 and 1995.
Q9. What did the authors conclude that the studies were too varied to quantify risk?
An attempted meta-analysis of similar studies [97] concluded that the designs of these studies and measures used were too varied to meaningfully quantify risk and most of the studies had not excluded reverse causation or adequately controlled for confounding.
Q10. What is the reason for the decline in cognitive performance of cannabis users?
Cognitive impairmentIn 1993 case-control studies reported that regular cannabis users had poorer cognitive performance than non-cannabis-using controls but it was unclear whether this was because cannabis use impaired cognitive performance, persons with poorer cognitive functioning were more likely to become regular cannabis users, or some combination of the two [9].