Comment on The hidden mental health danger in today’s high-THC cannabis
bathing_in_bismuth@sh.itjust.works 1 week agoI don’t think people with schizophrenia will still be visiting your store. I am pro legalisation of cannabis, but the possible consequences should not be dismissed as propaganda.
For example: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30373388/ (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6591882/)
Now I agree that you could assert, in the case of depression and anxiety, these results could mean someone is self-medicating for said mental problems, thus clouding the objectivity. But that is not the case with psychosis. Not at all. That is entirely correlated to cannabis (and my personal research concludes this has to do with an increase trend of higher THC contents of strain in the past 30 years. A joint in 1995 is a hell of a lot different experience compared to today’s strains [yes I know there are strains focussing on CBD or other cannabinoids like CBG etc. But let’s not compare apples and oranges. Take a strain from 1995 and today, picked with the sole reason of getting high, and today’s strains will have a lot higher THC contents])
Normally I dislike editorial pieces but this one refers to solid papers: scientificamerican.com/…/the-link-between-cannabi…