• southsamurai
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    1 month ago

    I mean, marijuana induced psychosis is a thing, and has been known about for decades at least. It’s relatively rare as a percentage of use, and it’s dependent on a combination of dose, genetics, and frequency of use. Same with schizophrenia triggered by marijuana use. Both are well documented; enough so that I can’t complain about an a article taking it as granted.

    This is an expected outcome of wider usage, especially with access to higher doses in edibles among inexperienced users.

    Hyperemesis and other symptoms are a known, expected dose dependent result of marijuana use. Again, well documented to the point of it being common knowledge among regular users. You can take too much weed into your system. That has effects. The important part is that none of those effects are even close to effects of taking a similarly “too high” a dose of other recreational drugs.

    Yeah, the article should have included links to sources for readers looking for more info. But anyone that’s worked in an ER long enough has run into marijuana side effects. It really is something known, not just assumed or hypothesized. Used to be it was only the long term ER staff that would be able to immediately recognize it because weed was smoked, or edibles were made by the user. So the stupid high doses weren’t common.

    The ER I worked at sporadically, I think I maybe saw marijuana psychosis twice over a decade of what amounted to temp work. The hyperemesis I never personally saw. Now? My friends that still work in emergency care joke about it being a relief because weed related issues are finally outnumbering problems from meth, opiates, and crack. And my state hasn’t legalized yet. Mind you, it doesn’t literally outnumber the other drugs, the joking is about how common it’s becoming compared to just a decade ago.

    Seriously, it’s a thing, and it has been for as long as I was in the field.

    • quixotic120@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I think what the article is trying to present, poorly, is that the “relatively rare as a percentage of use” bit may have been because until relatively recently the sample size was significantly lower and the marijuana itself was far less potent.

      For what it’s worth anecdotally I have seen a number of people who utilize marijuana, medical or otherwise, for anxiety. I mention this because I work in mental health and regularly give said people anxiety screenings. For a great deal of them their anxiety scores worsen over time as they utilize marijuana. It’s certainly not a study by any means but I’ve had peers note the same and there are some studies that have occurred and are ongoing to the same effect. It’s not surprising; it’s like treating anxiety with benzodiazepines. It lowers the intensity of the anxiety in the moment but as result also decreases your overall resilience towards anxiety as a result because you are less reliant on more traditional coping skills