Natural recovery from cannabis use in people with psychosis: a qualitative study

Authors:
REBGETZ Shane, et al
Journal article citation:
Journal of Dual Diagnosis, 11(3/4), 2015, pp.179-183.
Publisher:
Taylor and Francis
Place of publication:
Philadelphia, USA

Objective: There is rapidly growing evidence of natural recovery from cannabis use in people with psychosis, but little is known about how it occurs. This qualitative study explores what factors influence the decision to cease cannabis use, maintain cessation, and prevent relapse. Methods: Ten people with early psychosis and lifetime cannabis misuse, who had been abstinent for at least a month, were recruited from public adult mental health services. These six men and four women participated in a semi-structured qualitative interview assessing reasons for addressing cannabis use, effective change strategies, lapse contexts, and methods used to regain control. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to identify themes in their responses. Results: Participants had a mean age of 23 years (SD = 3.7), started using cannabis at age 13.7 (SD = 1.6), began daily use at 17 (SD = 3.1), and had abstained from cannabis for 7.9 months (SD = 5.4). Awareness of the negative impact of substance use across multiple domains and the presence of social support for cannabis cessation were seen as vital to sustained success, as was utilisation of a combination of coping strategies. The ability to address pressure from substance-using peers was commonly mentioned. Conclusions: Maximally effective treatment may need to focus on eliciting a range of benefits of cessation and control strategies and on maximising both support for change and resistance to peer pressure. Further research might focus on comparing perceived effective strategies between individuals who obtain sustained cessation versus those who relapse. (Edited publisher abstract)

Subject terms:
drug misuse, psychoses, recovery, substance misuse;
Content type:
research
Location(s):
Australia
Link:
Journal home page
ISSN online:
1550-4271
ISSN print:
1550-4263

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