wsu study finds cannabis use can distort memory an

WSU Study Finds Cannabis Use Can Distort Memory and Increase False Recall

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High-quality evidence with meaningful patient or clinical significance.
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Why This Matters
Clinicians should counsel patients that cannabis use impairs memory formation and increases susceptibility to false memories, which has direct implications for patient safety, informed consent capacity, and reliability of medical histories. This evidence is particularly relevant when assessing patients with substance use disorders, cognitive complaints, or those in occupations requiring accurate memory and decision-making. Understanding these cognitive effects helps clinicians distinguish cannabis-related memory problems from other conditions and supports more informed discussions about risks before patients initiate or continue use.
Clinical Summary

A Washington State University study published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology examined cannabis effects on memory function and found that use can impair accurate recall while increasing susceptibility to false memories, representing one of the most comprehensive investigations to date of these cognitive effects. The research has direct clinical relevance for patients using cannabis therapeutically, particularly those in safety-sensitive occupations or with occupational demands requiring reliable memory formation and retrieval. These findings also matter for clinicians counseling patients about realistic expectations for cannabis use, especially regarding occupational performance and cognitive safety. The distortion of memory processes may have implications for patients with conditions like PTSD or anxiety where memory function is therapeutically relevant, and clinicians should incorporate this information into shared decision-making discussions about risks and benefits. For patients already using cannabis, this evidence supports monitoring for memory-related functional impairment and considering dose reduction or discontinuation if recall problems emerge. Clinicians should discuss these memory effects during initial counseling and revisit them periodically, particularly when cannabis is being considered or continued for patients whose daily functioning depends on accurate memory.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“What this research clarifies for my patients is that cannabis doesn’t simply impair memory in the way we once thoughtโ€”it actually distorts it, meaning people can develop false confidence in memories that never happened or happened differently, which has real implications for decision-making and safety in their daily lives. This isn’t reason to categorically avoid cannabis for those who benefit from it clinically, but it is reason to counsel patients honestly that they shouldn’t be making important decisions or driving while impaired, and to monitor cognitive effects more carefully in patients using it regularly.”
Clinical Perspective

๐Ÿ’ญ This Washington State University research adds to growing evidence that cannabis use can impair episodic memory and increase susceptibility to false memories, findings that warrant clinical attention during patient assessments and informed consent discussions. The study’s controlled design strengthens our understanding of acute cognitive effects, though clinicians should recognize that memory impairment may vary substantially based on individual factors such as frequency of use, cannabinoid composition (THC versus CBD ratios), age, and baseline cognitive reserve. When counseling patients about cannabis useโ€”whether for therapeutic or recreational purposesโ€”these cognitive effects merit explicit discussion alongside other known risks, particularly for populations relying heavily on accurate memory for safety or work performance. Healthcare providers should consider asking about memory concerns during routine visits and may need to adjust clinical expectations when gathering patient histories from regular cannabis users. Ultimately, this evidence supports a more comprehensive informed consent process and may inform clinical recommendations, particularly for patients with existing cognitive vulnerabilities or occupations requiring intact

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Further Reading
CED Clinic BlogWhy Cannabis Works
CED Clinic BlogCannabis for Sleep