FGCU looking for 1,000 certified medical marijuana users for anxiety study

Researchers at Florida Gulf Coast University have launched a statewide study to evaluate how anxiety levels may go up and down among medical marijuana users.

The aim is to enroll 1,000 Floridians who are certified medical marijuana users, according to Nathan Pipitone, the principal researcher at FGCU who works in the university’s Department of Psychology.

Patients will report daily for 45 days their anxiety level before using cannabis products and how it changes after use, he said.

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“We are not asking them to change how much they use,” he said.

There have been numerous peer-reviewed studies that establish medical marijuana use can address anxiety but what is not known is how much cannabis is needed to reduce anxiety, he said.

The goal is to begin working toward that understanding with this study, he said.

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“This is preliminary groundwork,” he said, adding that he recognizes the shortcomings of the study because it does not involve a controlled group of study participants not using medical marijuana.

“Hopefully it will open the door to allow more rigorous research,” he said.

The goal is to see if there is any typical amount that patients use to alleviate anxiety, he said. The preference for the study is smokable marijuana.

About one-third of Americans will suffer from a significant anxiety disorder at some point in their lives, Martha Rosenthal, a biologist at FGCU and a study collaborator, said in a news release.

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