In a new
study out of Washington state, researchers looked into the effects of
mixing alcohol and marijuana by surveying 2,400 people who say they
consumed alcohol in the last year. Of those people – surveyed in
2014 and 2015 – 70% say they used only alcohol while 18% say they
used alcohol and marijuana together and 13% said they used both
substances, but separately.
Those who
used both simultaneously reported drinking more at a time and more
often than those who used alcohol and marijuana separately or alcohol
only. Also according to the study, simultaneous users were three
times more likely to drive drunk, 6.5 times more likely to experience
alcohol-related financial problems and four times more likely to
experience alcohol-related health problems, compared with those who
used only alcohol.
While
correlation doesn’t equal causation, as we all know, I can say from
personal experience that ingesting both marijuana and alcohol at the
same time greatly increases the effects of both, so much so that an
entirely new effect is produced, one that neither substance on its
own can match. The alcohol tends to wipe away a lot of the
self-awareness that those who use marijuana only can usually retain,
and the marijuana seems to magnify the intoxicating effects of the
alcohol.
In other
words, using both at the same time is not conducive to good
decision-making and if you need to make important decisions and you
do both, you should do them separately or not at all. Of course, this
is not news to most people who have consumed both alcohol and
marijuana in the same night. They don’t combine the two when they
have a big meeting at work; they do so when they want to party.
This study
mirrors some of the same results of a larger study conducted last
year in all 50 states by the same group of researchers. That study
found that “the prevalence of simultaneous use was almost twice as
high as concurrent use, implying that individuals who use both
cannabis and alcohol tend to use them at the same time. Furthermore,
simultaneous use was associated with increased frequency and quantity
of alcohol use. Simultaneous use was also the most detrimental:
compared to alcohol only, simultaneous use approximately doubled the
odds of drunk driving, social consequences, and harms to self. The
magnitudes of differences in problems remained when comparing drunk
driving among simultaneous users to concurrent users.”
In reality,
mixing any 2 substances that have intoxicating effects will magnify
those effects. That is where adult responsibility comes in.
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