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Marijuana addiction, just what is it? The simple answer is that marijuana addiction is a scary talking point for the prohibitionists clinging to their jobs against the growing wave of marijuana legalization.
In the New England Journal of Medicine, a new report from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) claims that marijuana can be “addictive, harmful, and a gateway drug.” The lead author of the report is Dr. Nora Volkow, who is also the head of NIDA, the staffing and budget of which would be severely curtailed if marijuana were legalized nationwide. Would that conflict of interest color Dr. Volkow’s impartiality and scientific detachment when it comes to weed? You be the judge.
Volkow’s latest report claims, “Approximately nine percent of those who experiment with marijuana will become addicted. The number goes up to about one in six among those who start using marijuana as teenagers and to 25 to 50 percent among those who smoke marijuana daily.”
Whenever I read a statistic with such a range as “25 to 50 percent,” I am immediately doubtful of its veracity. Add to that my personal experiences of watching my dad try to kick booze, speed, and cigarettes, and I think I have a pretty good idea what “addicted” means. As one of the people who smoke marijuana daily, either I’m in that 50 to 75 percent who didn’t get addicted, or Dr. Volkow is stretching the meaning of “addiction” to “daily marijuana user,” which makes it a tautology.
These marijuana addiction statistics are based on the criteria psychologists use to categorize mental illness. These criteria are contained in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders, known as the DSM. The new fifth edition, the DSM-V, was just released in May of last year, but Dr. Volkow’s “nine percent” and “one in six teens” statistics have been bandied about far prior to 2013. I recall Kevin Sabet and Project SAM using those lines back in 2012 and I’ve seen the “nine percent” figure as early as 2008.
That means the “marijuana addiction” referred to by Dr. Volkow and others must be the form described in the previous manual, the DSM-IV. According to that version, a marijuana smoker who exhibits three or more of the following symptoms within a year suffers from “cannabis dependence” — the scientific literature’s term for marijuana addiction:
Tolerance, as defined by: A need for markedly increased amounts of the substance to achieve intoxication or desired effect.
Tolerance, as defined by: Markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same amount of the substance.
So, the fact that you’ve been smoking pot long enough that a single puff off a joint doesn’t turn you into a giggling idiot means you may be a marijuana addict!
Withdrawal, as manifested by: The characteristic withdrawal syndrome for the substance.
The so-called “withdrawal” from cannabis, according to Dr. Volkow’s own NIDA website, is characterized by “irritability, sleeplessness, decreased appetite, anxiety, and drug craving.” (I recall my dad’s withdrawal from alcohol and speed involved hallucinations, cold sweats, extreme pain, delirium tremens, vomiting, the possibility of death, and eventually a 30-day hospital detox.)
So, if you’ve run out of weed and it’s made you grumpy, anxious, and unable to eat and sleep, you may be a marijuana addict! Of course, you could be using cannabis as medicine to deal with your anxiety, insomnia, and lack of appetite and taking away your medicine has made you crave some marijuana. In that case, you may be a marijuana addict!
Withdrawal, as manifested by: Taking the same (or a closely related) substance to relieve or avoid withdrawal symptoms.
So, if you’re out of weed and you popped an Ambien for the insomnia, Prozac for the anxiety, and drank a beer to adjust your attitude, you may be a marijuana addict!
What is pharmaceutical drug addiction? The truth is scary. Better spread misinformation to protect the pill addiction pushers.
marijuana is not physcially addictive. BUT IT IS psychologically addictive – it’s a mental crutch. That’s what’s so attractive about it…stoned, a person doesn’t have to think about all the problems of daily living that are confronting them. Wee! But that doesn’t work out well…in fact, it’s disasterous! As for being a gateway drug…I agree – but not because of physical addiction, but because of the social network associated with the acquisition and use of marijuana. It’s a loser crowd of very nice, friendly people who are ALSO psychologically addicted and may be familiar with stronger drugs that are BOTH psychologically addictive AND physically addictive, such as coke products.