Publication | Open Access
Stigma among California’s Medical Marijuana Patients
123
Citations
32
References
2015
Year
StigmatizationSubstance UseDrug PolicyMental HealthDrug TreatmentHealth CommunicationCannabis LegalizationAddiction MedicinePsychoactive Substance UsePublic HealthMedical MarijuanaSocial StigmaPsychiatryHealth PolicyMental Health StigmaSexual StigmaMedical Marijuana PatientsSubstance AbuseStigma StudiesProcess StigmaMedicalizationMedicine
The enactment of California's Proposition 215 stipulates that patients may use marijuana for medical reasons, provided that it is recommended by a physician. Yet, medical marijuana patients risk being stigmatized for this practice. This article examines the way in which medical marijuana patients perceive and process stigma, and how it affects their interactions and experiences with others. Eighteen semi-structured interviews of medical marijuana patients were carried out using a semi-structured interview guide. Most patients circumvented their own physicians in obtaining a recommendation to use medicinal marijuana, and also used a host of strategies in order to justify their medical marijuana use to family, friends, and colleagues in order to stave off potential stigma. The stigmatization of medical marijuana thus has a profound effect on how patients seek treatment, and whether they seek medical marijuana treatment at all.
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