5 results on '"Munn, Catharine"'
Search Results
2. Cannabis Use as a Risk Factor for Depression, Anxiety, and Suicidalit: Epidemiological Associations and Implications for Nurses.
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Halladay, Jillian E., MacKillop, James, Munn, Catharine, Jack, Susan M., and Georgiades, Katholiki
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,NURSING education ,ANXIETY ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,MENTAL illness ,NEUROBIOLOGY ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,SUICIDAL ideation ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Psychiatric disorders and substance use disorders commonly co-occur and are major public health concerns given the morbidity and mortality associated with them. Globally, cannabis is among the most commonly used drugs, and cannabis use frequently begins in adolescence or emerging adulthood, both important periods of development and periods in which psychiatric symptoms and disorders frequently emerge. Thus, the relationships between cannabis use and mental illnesses are essential for nurses and other healthcare professionals and researchers to explore and understand. This literature review examines the relationships between cannabis use and depression, anxiety, and suicide. It includes a primer on the neurobiology of cannabis effects; an overview on the epidemiological evidence on the associations between cannabis use and depression, anxiety, and suicide; and a discussion of implications for nurses, particularly important given changes in the medical and recreational cannabis legislation in North America. Overall, this review found consistent evidence showing a cross-sectional association between recreational cannabis use and depression, anxiety, and suicide, despite some limitations and conflicts in the literature. In addition, most evidence from longitudinal or case control studies suggested cannabis use preceded the development of depressive symptoms and suicidal behaviors, although the quality of this evidence was mixed. Implications for future research and nursing practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. Sex Differences in the Association Between Cannabis Use and Suicidal Ideation and Attempts, Depression, and Psychological Distress Among Canadians.
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Halladay, Jillian E., Boyle, Michael H., Munn, Catharine, Jack, Susan M., and Georgiades, Katholiki
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PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,SUICIDAL ideation ,MENTAL health surveys ,MARIJUANA ,SOCIAL surveys ,SUICIDE risk factors - Abstract
Background: Depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders are leading causes of morbidity worldwide. The most commonly used illicit substance is cannabis and there is some evidence that the association between cannabis use and poor mental health is more pronounced among females compared with males. This analysis examines sex differences in the association between cannabis use and major depressive episode (MDE), suicidal thoughts and attempts, and psychological distress.Methods: This study uses data from the 2002 and 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey's Mental Health Component, repeated cross-sectional surveys of nationally representative samples of Canadians 15 years of age and older ( n = 43,466). Linear and binary logistic regressions were performed, applying weighting and bootstrapping.Results: There were significant sex differences in the strength of the association between cannabis use and suicidal thoughts and attempts and psychological distress, but not MDE. Females who reported using cannabis occasionally (defined as 1 to 4 times a month) reported higher levels of psychological distress than their male counterparts. Females who reported using regularly (defined as more than once per week) reported higher levels of psychological distress and were more likely to report suicidal thoughts and attempts.Conclusions: Future research is needed to further our understanding of the nature of these sex differences. Public health messaging should incorporate being female as a potential risk factor for the co-occurrence of cannabis use and emotional problems, particularly at higher frequencies of use. Clinicians should also be aware of this association to better inform integrated mental health and substance use screening, discussions, and care, particularly for female patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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4. Overlapping patterns of recreational and medical cannabis use in a large community sample of cannabis users.
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Turna, Jasmine, Balodis, Iris, Munn, Catharine, Van Ameringen, Michael, Busse, Jason, and MacKillop, James
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Regulatory changes are increasing access to both medical cannabis and cannabis in general. As such, understanding patterns of recreational and medical cannabis use is a high public health priority. Patterns of cannabis use (recreational and medical), other substance use, and psychiatric symptoms were characterized in a large sample of community adult cannabis users in Canada, prior to federal cannabis legalization. This was a self-report assessment of 709 cannabis users (Mean age = 30.19 (11.82) years; 55.01% female). Patterns of overall substance use and psychiatric symptomatology were compared based on recreational/medical cannabis status. Overall, 61.4% of participants endorsed exclusively recreational use, while 38.6% reported some level of medical use. Of all medical users, only 23.4% reported authorization from a health professional. Recreational cannabis users typically reported infrequent use (less than weekly), whereas medical users modally reported daily use. Compared to recreational users, medical users reported more problematic cannabis use in addition to greater psychiatric symptomatology (anxiety, depression and trauma). Interestingly, a large majority of medical users also reported using recreationally (80.6%), while exclusive medical use was less common (19.3%). This dual motives group reported more daily cannabis use and more alcohol and tobacco use. Compared to medical-only users, individuals using cannabis for both medical and recreational purposes more often used cannabis to treat psychiatric conditions. These findings reveal the differences in cannabis use patterns and preferences between recreational and medical users, and even within medical users. In particular, dual motives individuals, who use cannabis for both positively and negatively reinforcing purposes, may warrant special attention as a subpopulation. • Regulations are increasing cannabis access, but comparisons of medical/recreational use are limited. • Most medical users (89.0%) report cannabis manages symptoms/disease and two-thirds report less use of other medicines. • Medical users show more psychopathology, substance use and problematic cannabis use; 80.1% also use recreationally (MED + REC). • Compared to medical only, MED + REC report more substance use. Despite similar severity, more use cannabis for psychiatric conditions. • MED + REC users may be at-risk subpopulation requiring attention in a post-legalization landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Brief interventions for cannabis use in emerging adults: A systematic review, meta-analysis, and evidence map.
- Author
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Halladay, Jillian, Scherer, Justin, MacKillop, James, Woock, Rachel, Petker, Tashia, Linton, Vanessa, and Munn, Catharine
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META-analysis , *MARIJUANA , *ADULTS , *MENTAL health , *MENTAL illness - Abstract
Purpose: This systematic review summarizes and critically appraises the existing literature on brief interventions (BIs) for cannabis use among emerging adults.Methods: Eligible BIs were operationalized as 1-2 sessions focused exclusively on cannabis use for samples with mean ages between 15 and 30. Outcomes related to cannabis use, other substance use, mental health, help-seeking, or functional status were included. Two independent reviewers screened a total of 3638 records, identifying 244 studies for full-text screening. In total, 32 BIs in 26 primary studies with 6318 participants were included.Results: Participants were typically not seeking treatment and using cannabis at least once a month. Most interventions were motivational, single sessions, and delivered in person. Few discussed concurrent psychiatric conditions. Pooling results at 1-3 months post-intervention, BIs compared to passive control slightly reduced symptoms of cannabis use disorder (SMD -0.14 [95% CI -0.26 to -0.01]) and increased the odds of abstinence (OR 1.73 [95% CI 1.13-2.66]). Other outcome results often favored BIs but were not significant. Results of studies comparing types of BIs (k = 8) or BIs to longer interventions (k = 1) are discussed narratively. Quality assessment suggested low to very low-quality evidence.Conclusions: This review indicates that BIs targeting non-treatment seeking emerging adults result in significant reductions in symptoms of cannabis use disorder and an increased likelihood of cannabis abstinence, however evidence is of low quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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