WHY IT MATTERS: If you are a parent, caregiver, or young adult considering cannabis, this study reinforces that adolescent brain development is a critical window where unsupervised use may carry serious long-term psychiatric risks that do not necessarily apply to adult medical patients under clinical guidance. CLINICAL OVERVIEW: A new longitudinal study links adolescent cannabis use to increased risk of later bipolar and psychotic disorder diagnoses, adding to a growing body of evidence that the developing brain is uniquely vulnerable to cannabinoid exposure. While this research does not apply directly to adult medical cannabis patients, it reinforces what clinicians in cannabis medicine have long emphasized: age of onset matters enormously, and adolescent use carries a fundamentally different risk profile than supervised adult medical use.
Teens Using Weed Have Doubled Risk For Psychosis, Bipolar Disorder
New research is sounding the alarm on teen cannabis use and mental health risk. Here’s what you need to know: Study tracked teens through age 26 Results showed doubled risk for psychosis and bipolar disorder in teen users ️ The developing brain is uniquely vulnerable to THC exposure ️ This is why cannabis medicine physicians distinguish between adult therapeutic use and adolescent recreational use ️ Age-appropriate care matters As a physician who has treated over 30,000 patients, I firmly believe cannabis has real medical value for adults. But that belief comes with a responsibility to be honest: the teen brain is still under construction, and we need to protect it. Talk to your kids. Talk to your doctor. Get the facts. New research links teen cannabis use to doubled psychosis and bipolar risk by age 26. The developing brain deserves different rules than the adult brain.