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FAU Study Investigates Barriers and Emerging Trends in Treating Cannabis Use Disorder

June 3, 2025
in Social Science
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Years of Data Reveal Why Most People with Cannabis Problems Don’t Seek Help
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As cannabis legalization and potency continue to rise across the United States, understanding the landscape of cannabis use disorder (CUD) treatment has never been more critical. Recent research reveals a troubling paradox: although millions meet clinical criteria for cannabis use disorder, a markedly small proportion ever engage with treatment services. With over 16 million Americans affected, this discrepancy between need and treatment uptake signals a pressing public health challenge that demands urgent attention, nuanced investigation, and targeted intervention.

A pioneering study conducted by Florida Atlantic University alongside national collaborators delves into 16 years of longitudinal data drawn from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). Spanning survey waves from 2003, 2011, and 2019, this research marks one of the most comprehensive efforts to parse evolving trends in the treatment patterns for cannabis use disorder. By leveraging advanced statistical modeling, the investigators illuminate how demographic variables such as age, gender, race and ethnicity intertwine with socioeconomic factors to influence treatment accessibility and utilization over time. The findings yield a complex portrait of treatment disparities and shifting barriers amid an evolving sociopolitical backdrop around cannabis use.

Despite mounting clinical recognition of cannabis use disorder and increasing awareness campaigns, the proportion of individuals receiving formal treatment has paradoxically declined over the study period. In 2003, approximately 19% of individuals with CUD reported engaging in some form of treatment, whereas by 2019 this figure had dwindled to just 13%. This decline underscores an acute treatment gap exacerbated by multifaceted access challenges, knowledge deficits, and sociocultural obstacles. Such data compel a reevaluation of current outreach, education, and policy frameworks aimed at bridging this divide.

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Crucially, the study identifies the prevailing reasons individuals with cannabis use disorder avoid seeking help. A growing fraction report uncertainty about where to find treatment and express ambivalence or unreadiness to cease cannabis use. Financial strain, stigma, and fears about adverse occupational consequences also prominently deter help-seeking behaviors. The escalation of these concerns across data points reflects both entrenched systemic barriers and emerging sociocultural dynamics within the legal cannabis era.

Moreover, the investigators reveal stable predictors of treatment receipt. Engagement with mental health services within the past year emerged as a significant correlate of CUD treatment utilization, highlighting the importance of integrated behavioral health frameworks. Similarly, involvement with the criminal justice system, especially probation or parole supervision, markedly increased the likelihood of entering treatment. This intersection suggests that external monitoring mechanisms may prompt or facilitate care engagement, although it raises complex questions about voluntariness and equity within justice-involved populations.

Interestingly, the research documents notable shifts in racial and ethnic disparities in treatment access. Initially, Hispanic individuals demonstrated significantly lower odds of receiving treatment compared to non-Hispanic white counterparts in 2003. However, over time, this disparity diminished to statistical nonsignificance by 2019, indicating modest strides toward equitable treatment penetration within historically underserved communities. The mechanisms underpinning this progress remain to be fully elucidated but may reflect targeted outreach or broader societal changes in health care access.

Conversely, prior arrests, once unrelated to treatment engagement in 2003, emerged as potent predictors in later years, doubling or tripling the odds of entering cannabis treatment. This trend reflects an increasing intertwining of criminal justice involvement and behavioral health service utilization. Such findings highlight both the opportunity and ethical complexity inherent in leveraging justice supervision to promote health interventions, underscoring the need for reform to ensure supportive, rather than punitive, pathways to treatment.

Sex and socioeconomic factors further stratify treatment trends. Males predominantly constitute the CUD population, yet those seeking treatment tend to skew older, identify as non-Hispanic white, and report lower income brackets. Insurance type also trends downward for private coverage utilization in treatment, with public insurance increasingly supporting care delivery. These shifts reflect broader healthcare market dynamics and raise critical questions about the role of insurance coverage design in facilitating or hindering treatment engagement for substance use disorders.

The modalities of treatment itself remain relatively consistent, with self-help groups and outpatient rehabilitation programs forming the backbone of care settings accessed by individuals with cannabis use disorder. While these modalities offer accessibility and community-based support, their efficacy and specificity for cannabis-related pathology require continued evaluation. Integrating evidence-based psychotherapies and emerging pharmacotherapies into accessible care models remains a crucial frontier for clinical innovation.

Increasingly, stigma manifests as a profound barrier. Participants report worry that seeking treatment could jeopardize employment or career trajectory—a concern that notably intensified by 2019, wherein 28% feared job-related consequences. Coupled with 38% of individuals reporting uncertainty about where to seek help, these perceptual obstacles impede efforts to escalate treatment engagement. Addressing stigma necessitates culturally sensitive public health messaging and systemic efforts to reduce discrimination linked to substance use.

The implications of this research extend beyond epidemiological description. As researcher Brian D. Graves of Florida Atlantic University highlights, “Barriers to treatment are evolving over time.” Tackling cannabis use disorder in this climate demands multifaceted strategies that transcend awareness building to dismantle affordability, accessibility, and stigma-related impediments. Only through coordinated, informed, and equity-focused partnerships can the treatment gap be meaningfully narrowed.

Given the intertwined nature of mental health, criminal justice involvement, and socioeconomic factors in shaping treatment trajectories, the findings advocate for integrated, cross-sectoral approaches. Embedding CUD treatment within broader healthcare and social service contexts could improve identification and referral pathways. Similarly, reforming justice systems to prioritize therapeutic rather than punitive responses aligns with principles of harm reduction and public health.

As cannabis policies and social norms continue to shift rapidly, the continued surveillance of treatment utilization patterns remains essential. This study’s longitudinal approach sets a critical methodological standard, demonstrating the value of nationally representative data to inform nuanced, dynamic public health strategies. Future work must elucidate causal pathways and test innovative models to reduce barriers specific to diverse populations.

In sum, the research paints a compelling portrait of a pervasive yet under-addressed public health challenge. Despite expanded legalization and growing prevalence of cannabis use disorder, treatment engagement remains insufficient and skewed by demographic, systemic, and psychosocial factors. Addressing these gaps requires urgent, comprehensive efforts that foreground equity, stigma reduction, and integration of care. The stakes—both for individual well-being and societal harm reduction—could not be higher as the cannabis landscape evolves.


Subject of Research: People

Article Title: An Analysis of 16-Year Trends in Cannabis Use Disorder Treatment: Predictors, Barriers, and Utilization Patterns

News Publication Date: 19-May-2025

Web References:

  • Florida Atlantic University: https://www.fau.edu
  • Journal Article: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/MIE2AHPPIHYFZNYEDD8U/full?target=10.1080/10826084.2025.2505773

Image Credits: Alex Dolce, Florida Atlantic University

Keywords:
Substance related disorders, Addiction, Diseases and disorders, Public health, Human health, Health disparity, Health equity, Health counseling, Social sciences, Psychological science, Sociology, Social issues

Tags: cannabis legalization effects on treatmentcannabis treatment engagement ratescannabis use disorder treatment barriersdemographic factors in cannabis treatmentemerging trends in substance abuseFlorida Atlantic University cannabis studylongitudinal study cannabis use disordernational survey cannabis use disorderpublic health challenges cannabis usesocioeconomic factors in addiction treatmenttreatment disparities cannabis userstrends in cannabis treatment
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