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Canna~Fangled Abstracts

Green Hope: Perspectives on Cannabis from People who Use Opioids

By August 20, 2021September 20th, 2021No Comments

doi: 10.1111/soin.12359. Epub 2020 Feb 13.

Affiliations 

Abstract

While states are implementing policies to legalize cannabis for medical or recreational purposes, it remains a Schedule 1 controlled substance with no medical uses according to US federal law. The perception of cannabis depends on social and cultural norms that impact political institutions involved in implementing policy. Because of negative social constructions, such as the “gateway hypothesis,” legalization of cannabis has been slow and contentious. Recent studies suggest that cannabis can help combat the opioid epidemic. This paper fills a gap in our understanding of how cannabis is viewed by people who are actively misusing opioids and not in treatment. Using ethnographic methods to recruit participants living in a state that legalized cannabis and a state where cannabis was illegal, survey and interview data were analyzed informed by a social constructionist lens. Findings from their “insider perspective” suggest that for some people struggling with problematic opioid use, cannabis can be beneficial.

 

Keywords: Alcohol, Community and Urban Sociology, Crime, Deviance, Drugs and Tobacco, Law, Sociological Practice & Public Sociology

Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts: None to declare.


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