Prevalence of medical and nonmedical cannabis use among veterans in primary care.

Psychol Addict Behav

Dissemination and Training Division, National Center for PTSD, VA Palo Alto Health Care System.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked into cannabis use among Veterans Health Administration primary care patients in a state that allows medical cannabis, focusing on prevalence and factors influencing use.
  • Nearly 19% of veterans reported using cannabis in the past year, with a distinction between recreational (14.1%) and medical (7.0%) users; younger age, lower education, and other substance use correlated with higher cannabis use.
  • Results suggest that recreational users face more clinical drawbacks compared to those using cannabis strictly for medical purposes, highlighting the need for monitoring and intervention services in states where cannabis is legal.

Article Abstract

Objective: This study examined past-year cannabis use prevalence and sociodemographic and clinical correlates of cannabis use among Veterans Health Administration (VHA) primary care patients in a state with legalized medical cannabis.

Method: Participants were 1,072 predominantly white, male, VHA primary care patients enrolled in a drug screening validation study (2012-2014). Sociodemographic and clinical correlates were examined by past-year cannabis use status. Multivariate regression models, adjusted for demographics, estimated cannabis use prevalence and clinical correlates among recreational, medical, and both medical and recreational users.

Results: Nearly one in five (18.7%) veterans endorsed past-year cannabis use, with 14.1% of the total sample reporting any recreational use and 7.0% reporting any medical use. Correlates of any past-year use included younger age, period of service, being unmarried, lower education, lower income, other substance use, meeting criteria for an alcohol or drug use disorder or posttraumatic stress disorder, higher pain rating, and lower self-reported well-being. Compared to veterans endorsing only recreational use, veterans endorsing only medical use reported more cannabis use days but had lower odds of other drug use, alcohol or drug-related problems, or alcohol or drug use disorders. Differences between recreational only users and those using medical and recreational cannabis were minimal.

Conclusions: Veterans enrolled in VHA in states with legalized cannabis may be particularly likely to use cannabis. Veterans identifying as recreational users may be at increased risk for adverse clinical outcomes compared to medical-only users. Prevalence monitoring, assessment, and intervention services should be considered, particularly in states with legalized cannabis. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/adb0000725DOI Listing

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