Meet the People Trading Their Anti-Anxiety Meds in for Cannabis

Anxiety isn’t a qualifying condition for medical marijuana use in most states, but it’s still being used for that condition

Ashley Laderer
Elemental

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Illustration by Clay Hickson

InIn case you missed it, cannabis is no longer just the stuff of stoners. People from all walks of life are turning to cannabis as a remedy for what ails them — including chronic pain, epilepsy, and anxiety — and not necessarily as a means of getting high. It’s estimated that there are over 2 million legal medical marijuana patients in the United States.

Anxiety isn’t recognized as a “qualifying condition” in most states where medical marijuana is legal, but data suggests there’s a movement of people using cannabis to reduce their anxiety, with some even going so far as to forego their anti-anxiety medication for a more “natural” solution.

Currently, anxiolytics (such as Xanax or Klonopin) and antidepressants (like Prozac or Zoloft) are the norm for treating anxiety disorders — alone or in conjunction with therapy. However, anxiolytics are habit-forming and are not meant for long-term use, and antidepressants, especially selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which are the most common class of the drugs, can have side effects ranging from sexual dysfunction and…

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