1. Trends in Prevalence of Cannabis Use Disorder Among U.S. Veterans With and Without Psychiatric Disorders Between 2005 and 2019.
- Author
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Livne, Ofir, Malte, Carol, Olfson, Mark, Wall, Melanie, Keyes, Katherine, Maynard, Charles, Gradus, Jaimie, Saxon, Andrew, Martins, Silvia, McDowell, Yoanna, Fink, David, Mannes, Zachary, Gutkind, Sarah, Hasin, Deborah, and Keyhani, Salomeh
- Subjects
Cannabis ,Epidemiology ,Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders ,Adult ,Humans ,Aged ,Prevalence ,Veterans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Psychotic Disorders ,Cannabis ,Marijuana Abuse - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Cannabis use disorder diagnoses are increasing among U.S. adults and are more prevalent among people with comorbid psychiatric disorders. Recent changes in cannabis laws, increasing cannabis availability, and higher-potency cannabis may have placed people with cannabis use and psychiatric disorders at disproportionately increasing risk for cannabis use disorder. The authors used Veterans Health Administration (VHA) data to examine whether trends in cannabis use disorder prevalence among VHA patients differ by whether they have psychiatric disorders. METHODS: VHA electronic health records from 2005 to 2019 (N range, 4,332,165-5,657,277) were used to identify overall and age-group-specific (
- Published
- 2024