How to quit cannabis when you have a mental illness: study from the perspective of patients who have successfully quit
Aims and method Research regarding quitting cannabis use often excludes patients with severe mental illness (SMI). We investigated facilitating and impeding factors in SMI patients and their advice to others, using semi-structured interviews with 12 SMI-patients, who were daily cannabis users for ≥1...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cambridge University Press
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Series: | BJPsych Bulletin |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2056469423000694/type/journal_article |
Summary: | Aims and method
Research regarding quitting cannabis use often excludes patients with severe mental illness (SMI). We investigated facilitating and impeding factors in SMI patients and their advice to others, using semi-structured interviews with 12 SMI-patients, who were daily cannabis users for ≥12 months and had fully stopped using for ≥6 months.
Results
Seeking distraction, social contacts in personal environment, avoiding temptation and support from professionals were facilitating factors in stopping. Impeding factors were withdrawal symptoms, user environment, experiencing stress and user's routine. Advice to other patients included to just do it, seek support from others, quit ‘cold turkey’ and acknowledge that cannabis use is a problem. Advice to mental health professionals is to discuss cannabis use from the start of treatment.
Clinical implications
It is important to inform patients that cannabis use has negative consequences and limits the effects of treatment. Do not judge cannabis use or force the patient to stop.
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ISSN: | 2056-4694 2056-4708 |