This shows two heads, one is made up of leaves.
While cannabis decriminalization does not increase public consumption, fully commercialized for-profit markets drive severe rises in product potency, adult addiction, and psychiatric hospital admissions for psychosis. Credit: Neuroscience News

Legalized Cannabis Does Not Increase Consumption

Summary: Decriminalizing cannabis or using tightly controlled legal frameworks does not increase use. However, the fully commercialized, for-profit legal markets seen in the US and Canada drive increased health risks, higher product potency, and elevated rates of addiction and psychosis admissions. Additionally, an analysis of 54 clinical trials found little strong evidence that medical cannabinoids effectively treat primary psychiatric disorders like anxiety, PTSD, or depression.

Key Facts

  • Framework Matters Most: Decriminalizing possession or implementing strict state-controlled access (limiting potency and market scale) shows virtually no evidence of increasing population-level cannabis use.
  • Commercialization Drives Addiction: Large-scale for-profit legal markets in the US and Canada have escalated product potency, resulting in surging addiction rates where daily cannabis consumers now outnumber daily alcohol consumers in the US.
  • Psychiatric Consequences: Commercial legal landscapes correlate with a marked rise in emergency hospital admissions for psychosis, especially cases where severe psychotic disorders manifest alongside cannabis use disorder.
  • Equity & Justice Shifts: The study highlights that shifting from criminal enforcement to healthcare models via decriminalization can alleviate the racially disproportionate policing historically concentrated in Black communities.
  • Weak Medical Efficacy Evidence: An analysis of 54 clinical trials revealed medical cannabinoids provide only modest benefits for insomnia and specific autism traits, but show no meaningful effectiveness for anxiety, PTSD, depression, or opioid dependence.

Source: University of Bath

Removing criminal penalties for possessing cannabis for personal use, or introducing tightly controlled legalisation of cannabis, does not appear to increase levels of cannabis use.

However, the commercial sale of cannabis is linked to increased health risks, with large-scale for-profit markets – such as those seen in the US and Canada – resulting in more potent products and higher rates of addiction.

These findings are reported in a study published on Wednesday, June 17, in The Lancet Psychiatry led by experts in addiction and mental health at the University of Bath in the UK, together with an international team from the Americas, Europe, Africa, Australia, New Zealand and Asia.

Co-authors Professor Tom Freeman, and Dr Rachel Lees Thorne, both from the Department of Psychology at Bath, say their findings highlight the distinct effects of different policy approaches globally.

Evolving policies around the world

Cannabis policies are rapidly evolving worldwide. Today, they range from strict prohibition to fully commercialised legalisation. The new paper examines global changes in cannabis policy between 2000 and 2025, and how these are linked to changes in cannabis use, cannabis addiction and other psychiatric disorders.

In the UK, cannabis is a Class B controlled drug, with a maximum penalty for possession of up to five years in prison, an unlimited fine, or both. A 2025 report by the London Drugs Commission, commissioned by London Mayor Sadiq Khan, titled The Cannabis Conundrum: a way forward for London, proposed decriminalising possession of cannabis for recreational use.

Such a change could shift the focus from managing cannabis through criminal law enforcement to healthcare, and address the disproportionate level of cannabis policing found in black communities. The findings of this new global analysis indicated that when other countries had decriminalised cannabis, there was little evidence for changes in cannabis use.

Other countries have gone a step further by legalising cannabis. The first country in the world to do this was Uruguay, which today has a tightly controlled approach where adults can access a restricted range of cannabis products from pharmacies (with limits on their potency) as well as cannabis social clubs, or by growing cannabis themselves.

In Uruguay, along with other contexts in which cannabis legalisation is tightly controlled, there is little evidence of changes in cannabis use.

By contrast, in many US states and in Canada, cannabis is legally sold through well-established, for-profit markets, making cannabis widely available. In these commercialised legal markets, use of the drug has increased. Cannabis potency has also increased since the legalisation of commercial sales, along with rates of addiction among adults, characterised by people struggling to stop using the drug despite negative effects on daily life.

Professor Freeman said: “In a rapidly changing global cannabis policy landscape it is increasingly important to ask how policy will change, rather than if it will change at all. The type of policy change is critical.

“We found little evidence for changes in use after decriminalisation or tightly controlled legalisation. By contrast, in Canada and the US, policy changes have been more substantial through commercialised legalisation, which have increased sales and consumption.

“There are now more daily consumers of cannabis than daily consumers of alcohol in the US. What followed commercialised legalisation was a rise in cannabis addiction as well as increases in hospital admissions for psychosis, including cases where psychotic disorders occurred alongside cannabis addiction.

“The emergence of a for-profit cannabis industry can result in commercial interests being prioritised over public health – just as we have seen with the alcohol and tobacco industries. Increased availability of cannabis products, greater product strength and active marketing of these products can increase the risk of harm.

“Alternative policies – such as decriminalisation or strictly regulated legalisation – can remove the harms of criminalising people who use cannabis, while limiting changes in use.”

Medical cannabis

The researchers found that poorly regulated access to medical cannabis, particularly in the absence of clear evidence on its safety and effectiveness, may also increase the risk of harm to people’s health.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs is currently reviewing evidence on the impact of the UK’s 2018 legalisation of medical cannabis, including whether it has achieved its desired aims and whether there have been unintended consequences.

Professor Freeman said: “As global cannabis policies continue to evolve, we need to do more to track their impact – particularly in countries outside of the US and Canada, where fewer studies are conducted.”

The new review is part of a collection of papers on cannabis published in The Lancet Psychiatry and led by the University of Bath in collaboration with international partners.

Cannabis products and mental illness

The second review finds evidence that daily cannabis use can act with other risk factors to increase the risk of psychosis, but its role in depression, anxiety and risk of suicidal thoughts or suicide was less clear. 

The third paper synthesises evidence from clinical trials into the use of medical cannabinoids (the active ingredients in cannabis) for the treatment of psychiatric disorders.

Though there is a growing trend to prescribe these substances to treat mental health and substance use disorders, the researchers found little strong evidence of their effectiveness on the basis of the available evidence from clinical trials.

Across 54 trials, limited benefits were found: cannabinoids modestly reduced cannabis withdrawal and use, improved sleep in insomnia, and helped with tics and some autism traits. But they also increased cocaine craving in people with cocaine use disorder and showed no meaningful effect for anxiety, PTSD, psychosis or opioid dependence. There were no trials for the treatment of depression.

Key Questions Answered:

Q: Does decriminalizing cannabis lead to an immediate spike in public drug use?

A: No. The global data analyzed between 2000 and 2025 demonstrates that removing criminal penalties for personal cannabis possession does not increase population-level consumption. Instead, decriminalization successfully shifts the societal framework from punitive law enforcement to healthcare interventions without driving up usage rates or expanding the consumer base.

Q: Why are the legal markets in the US and Canada seeing higher rates of mental health issues compared to other models?

A: The key driver is the for-profit corporate structure. In highly commercialized markets, corporate interests are frequently prioritized over public health. This leads to active marketing, increased product availability, and a dramatic escalation in THC potency. This combination has caused an increase in cannabis addiction and a rise in emergency hospital admissions for psychosis and co-occurring psychiatric disorders.

Q: What does the clinical research say about using medical cannabis to treat anxiety and depression?

A: Despite growing clinical trends to prescribe medical cannabinoids for mental health, a systematic review of 54 clinical trials found little robust evidence of their effectiveness. Cannabinoids showed no meaningful therapeutic effect for anxiety, PTSD, or opioid dependence, and there were no completed trials evaluating their impact on depression. They did, however, show modest benefits for improving sleep in insomnia, reducing cannabis withdrawal, and helping with certain autism traits.

Editorial Notes:

  • This article was edited by a Neuroscience News editor.
  • Journal paper reviewed in full.
  • Additional context added by our staff.

About this psychosis and cannabis research news

Author: Vittoria D’Alessio
Source: University of Bath
Contact: Vittoria D’Alessio – University of Bath
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News

Original Research: Open access.
International cannabis policies and their association with cannabis use, cannabis use disorder, and other psychiatric” disorders”” by Freeman TP, Lees Thorne R, Wadsworth E, Carney T, Castillo-Carniglia A, Cerdá M, Kalayasiri Q, Kilmer B, Lorenzetti V, Manthey J, Myran DT, Rivera-Aguirre A, Rychert M, Wilson J, Yimer T, Hall W. Lancet Psychiatry
DOI:10.1016/S2215-0366(26)00087-8


Abstract

International cannabis policies and their association with cannabis use, cannabis use disorder, and other psychiatric” disorders”

Cannabis policies vary from strict prohibition to commercialised legalisation and are rapidly evolving worldwide. Here, we reviewed evidence for associations between international cannabis policy changes from 2000–25 and cannabis use, cannabis use disorder, and other psychiatric disorders.

Commercialised legal markets for non-medical use in Canada and the USA were associated with increased prevalence of cannabis use and cannabis use disorder in adults and increases in cannabis potency since legalisation. There was no consistent evidence for associations between policy change and the prevalence or incidence of psychotic disorders.

Commercialised legalisation was associated with an increase in hospital admissions for psychosis, and for psychotic disorders comorbid with cannabis use disorder. Poorly regulated legal access to medical cannabis, in the absence of efficacy and safety data, could increase risk of harm.

Policies that limit commercialisation, such as strictly regulated legalisation of medical or non-medical supply, were not as strongly associated with cannabis use or psychiatric disorders, but long-term evaluation is needed.

There was little evidence that decriminalisation of non-medical cannabis in Europe, Africa, Oceania, and Asia was associated with cannabis use or psychiatric disorders.

Join our Newsletter
I agree to have my personal information transferred to AWeber for Neuroscience Newsletter ( more information )
Sign up to receive our recent neuroscience headlines and summaries sent to your email once a day, totally free.
We hate spam and only use your email to contact you about newsletters. You can cancel your subscription any time.
  1. The Prohibition of cannabis and Reefer Madness are only pushed and believed by a very small, lunatic-fringe minority of irrational looney-tune Holier Than Thou types that are on a never ending little personal moral-crusade and witch-hunt against relatively benign cannabis and it’s consumers. The rest of us sane, rational, normal Americans just laugh our butts off at and mock utterly desperate lying prohibitionists and their ridiculous Reefer-Madness-Rhetoric as the comedy show they truly are!

    Fear of Cannabis Legalization Nationwide is unfounded. Not based on any science or fact whatsoever. So please prohibitionists, we beg you to give your scare tactics, “Conspiracy Theories” and “Doomsday Scenarios” over the inevitable Legalization of Cannabis Nationwide a rest. Nobody is buying them anymore these days. Okay?

    Furthermore, if all prohibitionists get when they look into that nice, big and shiny crystal ball of theirs, while wondering about the future of cannabis legalization, is horror, doom, and despair, well then I suggest they return that thing as quickly as possible and reclaim the money they shelled out for it, since it’s obviously defective.

    The prohibition of cannabis has not decreased the supply nor the demand for cannabis at all. Not one single iota, and it never will. Just a huge and complete waste of our tax dollars to continue criminalizing citizens for choosing a natural, non-toxic, relatively benign plant proven to be much safer than alcohol.

    If prohibitionists are going to take it upon themselves to worry about “saving us all” from ourselves, then they need to start with the drug that causes more death and destruction than every other drug in the world COMBINED, which is alcohol!

    Why do prohibitionists feel the continued need to vilify and demonize cannabis when they could more wisely focus their efforts on a real, proven killer, alcohol, which again causes more destruction, violence, and death than all other drugs, COMBINED?

    Prohibitionists really should get their priorities straight and/or practice a little live and let live. They’ll live longer, happier, and healthier, with a lot less stress if they refrain from being bent on trying to control others through Draconian Cannabis Laws.

    Contrary to what prohibitionists are so desperately trying to get the public to believe wholeheartedly and without question, legalizing cannabis IS NOT adding anything new into our society that wasn’t always there and widely available already.

    Therefore cannabis legalization does not lead to some massive influx of new cannabis consumers. The very same people who have been consuming cannabis during it’s prohibition are for the most part the very same ones who will be consuming cannabis when it’s legal.

    The prohibition of cannabis has never prevented cannabis’s widespread availability nor anyone from consuming cannabis that truly desires to do so.

    Cannabis has been ingrained within our society since the days of our founding fathers and part of human culture since biblical times, for thousands of years.

    So, since cannabis has always been with us and humans already have thousands upon thousands of years worth of experience with cannabis, what great calamities and “Doomsday Scenarios” do prohibitionists really think will happen now due to current legalization efforts that have never ever happened before in all human history?

    Legalize Nationwide Federally Now!

    There is absolutely no doubt now that the majority of Americans want to completely legalize cannabis nationwide. Our numbers grow on a daily basis.

    The prohibitionist view on cannabis is the viewpoint of a minority and rapidly shrinking percentage of Americans. It is based upon decades of lies and propaganda.

    Each and every tired old lie they have propagated has been thoroughly proven false by both science and society.

    Their tired old rhetoric no longer holds any validity. The vast majority of Americans have seen through the sham of cannabis prohibition in this day and age. The number of prohibitionists left shrinks on a daily basis.

    With their credibility shattered, and their not so hidden agendas visible to a much wiser public, what’s left for a cannabis prohibitionist to do?

    Maybe, just come to terms with the fact that Cannabis Legalization Nationwide is an inevitable reality that’s approaching much sooner than prohibitionists think, and there is nothing they can do to stop it!

    Legalize Nationwide!…and Support All Cannabis Legalization Efforts!

    “Cannabis is 114 times safer than drinking alcohol”

    “Cannabis may be even safer than previously thought, researchers say”

    “Cannabis may be even safer than previously thought, researchers say New study: We should stop fighting Cannabis legalization and focus on alcohol and tobacco instead By Christopher Ingraham February 23

    Compared with other recreational drugs — including alcohol — Cannabis may be even safer than previously thought. And researchers may be systematically underestimating risks associated with alcohol use.

    Those are the top-line findings of recent research published in the journal Scientific Reports, a subsidiary of Nature. Researchers sought to quantify the risk of death associated with the use of a variety of commonly used substances. They found that at the level of individual use, alcohol was the deadliest substance, followed by heroin and cocaine.”
    -Washington Post

    “The report discovered that Cannabis is 114 times less deadly than alcohol. Researchers were able to determine this by comparing the lethal doses with the amount of typical use. Through this approach, Cannabis had the lowest mortality risk to users out of all the drugs they studied. In fact—because the numbers were crossed with typical daily use—Cannabis is the only drug that tested as “low risk.”
    -Complex

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *