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PTSD and Cannabis-Related Coping Among Recent Veterans in New York City.

Luther ElliottAndrew GolubAlexander BennettHonoria Guarino
Published in: Contemporary drug problems (2015)
This article presents interview and focus group data from veterans of recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan about their use of cannabis as a coping tool for dealing with posttraumatic stress disorder. Veterans' comparisons of cannabis, alcohol, and psychopharmaceuticals tended to highlight advantages to cannabis use as more effective and less complicated by side effects. Some participants suggested that cannabis can be part of an approach-based coping strategy that aids with introspection and direct confrontation of the sources of personal trauma. Others, however, held that cannabis use was part of a less productive, avoidant coping strategy. Some self-reports suggested the need for more nuanced theorizations of coping behaviors, as they indicated motivations for use that were grounded in symptom alleviation rather than any direct confrontation with (or avoidance of) sources of trauma.
Keyphrases
  • social support
  • depressive symptoms
  • posttraumatic stress disorder
  • drinking water
  • electronic health record
  • trauma patients
  • data analysis
  • drug induced