Researchers surveyed almost 600,000 U.S. adults from 2002 to 2014
about their drug use and health. Marijuana use increased from 10.4
percent of adults to 13.3 percent during the study period,
researchers report in The Lancet Psychiatry.
Over the same period, the proportion of adults who thought there was
a great risk of harm associated with smoking pot once or twice a
week declined from about 50 percent to 33 percent.
“Despite scientific evidence of potential harms, adults are much
less convinced about dangers associated with using marijuana,” said
lead study author Dr. Wilson Compton, deputy director of the
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).
“These reductions in perceived harm were strongly associated with
the increases in use,” Compton added by email.
Marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug in the U.S.,
according to NIDA.
Short-term effects of using this drug can include mood changes,
impaired body movements and difficulty with thinking, problem
solving and memory. Over time, the drug can also lead to breathing
challenges, increased heart rate and a range of mood disorders.
Overall, marijuana use by U.S. adults increased more than 30 percent
in the past dozen years, the study found, with 10 million more
people using pot in 2014 than in 2012.
Use of marijuana on a daily or near-daily basis increased even more
markedly.
In 2002, 3.9 million adults in the U.S. reported using marijuana
daily or nearly every day. By 2014, that number had more than
doubled to 8.4 million.
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“Physicians need to be aware of these changing patterns of marijuana
use to guide healthcare, and additional research needs to be
conducted to study the consequences – both acute and long-term –
that may be associated with frequent, heavy use,” Compton said.
Both the prevalence and frequency of marijuana use increased
starting around 2007 and showed significantly larger spikes after
2011, the study found.
During the study period, a growing number of U.S. states adopted
legislation legalizing marijuana for medical purposes and, in some
instances, for recreational use.
As of 2015, 24 states and the District of Columbia had passed
medical marijuana legislation, the study authors note.
Meanwhile, many countries outside the U.S. including Canada, India,
Mexico, Spain, Germany and the Netherlands have decriminalized
possession of small quantities of marijuana, the authors also point
out.
“The message that adults are not getting is that marijuana is a drug
and, like all drugs, can harm some users when it is used in certain
ways,” said Wayne Hall, director of the Center for Youth Substance
Abuse Research at the University of Queensland in Brisbane,
Australia.
“Like alcohol, it can when used daily over substantial periods of
time produce dependence and seriously interfere with some adults’
health and well-being,” Hall, author of an editorial accompanying
the study, said by email.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2bZI1Ze The Lancet Psychiatry, online August
31, 2016.
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