Dr. Mike Roizen
Dr. Mike Roizen is chief medical officer at the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute, an award-winning author, and has been the doctor to eight Nobel Prize winners and more than 100 Fortune 500 CEOs.

Dr. Mike Roizen

Tags: marijuana | opioids | pain | dr. roizen
OPINION

Medical Marijuana Can Trigger Problems

Michael Roizen, M.D. By Friday, 15 April 2022 11:48 AM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family — manufacturers of the opioids that devastated this country — are paying up to $6 billion to individual claimants and states for opioid abatement programs.

From April 2020 to April 2021, there were 75,673 opioid-related deaths in the U.S., and at least 2 million Americans have a substance use disorder related to prescription opioid pain medication.

There are big lessons to be learned from that, which might be applied to the legalization of medical marijuana.

Just because something makes people feel better and is thought to be pretty harmless, that doesn't mean it won't end up causing health problems later on. A new study out of Massachusetts General Hospital, published in JAMA Network Open, shows that when people with pain, anxiety, or depression obtain a medical marijuana card, a lot of them end up with cannabis use disorder (CUD) without seeing any improvement in their symptoms.

CUD is characterized by the need for increasing amounts of the drug to gain its effects and use of it even when it makes you feel bad.

If you're considering using marijuana to treat these types of symptoms, ask yourself if there are alternative treatments — such as stress management, physical activity, change in nutrition, talk therapy, massage, or acupuncture — that could provide relief without risking dependency.

As a country, we should ask the same question now that 36 states give out medical marijuana cards.

I say we should get lifestyle upgrades prescribed and covered by insurance.

That could change the world.

© King Features Syndicate


DrRoizen
Just because something makes people feel better and is thought to be pretty harmless, that doesn't mean it won't end up causing health problems later on.
marijuana, opioids, pain, dr. roizen
251
2022-48-15
Friday, 15 April 2022 11:48 AM
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