
40% of Medical Marijuana Patients Use Cannabis to Control Alcohol Cravings
A University of California, Berkley researcher says that almost half of medical marijuana patients at a Berkley marijuana dispensary are using cannabis to control alcohol cravings and suggests marijuana substitution as a “radical new alcohol treatment”.
According to Amanda Reiman, from the University of California, Berkley a significant percentage of medical marijuana dispensary clients are using marijuana, at least in part, as medication to control alcohol cravings.
In determining this, Reiman polled 350 patients who were clients of the Berkely Patient’s Group, a marijuana dispensary. She found that:
- 40% were using marijuana, at least in part, as a medication to relieve alcohol cravings
- 66% used marijuana as a preferable alternative to prescription medications
- 65% used marijuana because it had fewer adverse side effects than alcohol, prescription medications or illicit drugs
- 34% used marijuana because it caused fewer withdrawal symptoms
Reiman says that although many people would consider giving marijuana to alcoholics to be, “a radical treatment approach” that marijuana has fewer negative side effects than heavy drinking and “that substitution might be a viable alternative to abstinence for those who can't or won't completely stop using psychoactive substances."
Read the full results of the research study in Harm Reduction Journal.
More like this

Even Brain Damaged Alcoholics Can Expect Neural Recovery with Prolonged Sobriety
A study which proves that it is never too late to quit drinking shows that even severely brain damaged alcoholics (who suffer balance and walking problems from their neural deficits) will recover much balance and motor function in time.

20 Common Things People Realize When They Quit Drinking Alcohol
Of all the culturally conditioned behaviors we’ve mindlessly adopted, alcoholism is one of the most curious.

Alcohol Abstinence Reverses Brain Damage – But Treatment Must Be 2 Weeks or Longer to Take Advantage of Healing
Your brain heals quickly once you stop drinking and after a couple of weeks people start to see big improvements. Researchers say alcohol treatment needs to be at least this long to take advantage of this return of function.

Working 50+ Hours Per Month Raises Alcohol Abuse Risk Dramatically
People who work 50 or more hours per week are as much as three times more likely to develop a problem with alcohol as those who are unemployed.

Research Breakthrough Might End The Anxiety of Alcohol Withdrawal
Illinois researchers now understand on the molecular level how alcohol induces anxiety - and they think they might be able to stop it.