According to Health Canada (2022), 1 in 3 (33%) people who use cannabis will develop a problem with their use, and approximately 1 in 11 (9%) people who use cannabis will develop an addiction to it. This increases to 1 in 6 (17%) for people who begin using cannabis in their teenage years. Smoking cannabis daily also increases the risk of addiction to 25% - 50%.
Individuals who develop an addiction to cannabis typically:
- Want to use often, even when they didn't plan to
- Spend a lot of time thinking about and using cannabis
- Need a greater amount of cannabis to get the same effects
- Continue to use cannabis even though it is causing physical and or social problems
In addition to an increased risk of addiction, long-term use of cannabis can affect your brain and harm your memory, concentration, intelligence (IQ), and ability to think and make decisions (Health Canada, 2022).
Research has also shown that cannabis use impacts the development of psychosis in some individuals. Psychosis is a break with reality characterized by hallucinations, false beliefs (delusions), impaired thinking and lack of motivation.