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Determining Risks for Cannabis Use Disorder in the Face of Changing Legal Policies

Purpose of Review This review aims to summarize and critically evaluate the current literature on the associations between individual and socio-cultural factors that increase risk for cannabis use disorder (CUD), and policy change. Recent findings Epidemiological studies show that areas with permiss...

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Published in:Current addiction reports 2019-12, Vol.6 (4), p.466-477
Main Authors: Taylor, M., Cousijn, J., Filbey, Francesca
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Language:English
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description Purpose of Review This review aims to summarize and critically evaluate the current literature on the associations between individual and socio-cultural factors that increase risk for cannabis use disorder (CUD), and policy change. Recent findings Epidemiological studies show that areas with permissive legal cannabis climates are associated with greater individual risk factors for CUD. This includes (1) higher rates of edible consumption and vaping, (2) higher delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) potency and lower cannabidiol (CBD) levels, and (3) younger age of initiation of use. Summary A change in the socio-cultural level, such as shifts in the legalization of cannabis, could interact with individual-level factors in their associations with CUD. There is currently a lack of empirical studies that evaluate this interaction. We propose that future research consider a bioecological framework for CUD to allow for a comprehensive understanding of the effects of legal climate that could inform policy and clinical practice.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s40429-019-00288-6
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subjects Anxiety
Cannabis (A McRae-Clark and B Sherman
Decriminalization
Drug use
Home environment
Kinases
Marijuana
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Neurology
Perceptions
Personality
Psychiatry
Risk factors
Schizophrenia
Section Editors
Stress
Topical Collection on Cannabis
title Determining Risks for Cannabis Use Disorder in the Face of Changing Legal Policies
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