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More Americans smoke marijuana daily than drink alcohol, study claims

A cannabis policy researcher found that there are more daily marijuana users than there are Americans who drink alcohol everyday. Alcohol is still more widely-used than weed.

Newly-released research argues that more Americans use marijuana daily than drink alcohol every day.

The study, which was published in the journal Addiction on Wednesday, was authored by Carnegie Mellon University cannabis policy researcher Jonathan Caulkins. It relied on data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health.

Though more Americans drink alcohol than smoke weed overall, the study argues that this is the first time in American history that daily marijuana consumers outnumbered daily alcohol users.

According to the study, 17.7 million Americans reported using marijuana every day or near-daily as of 2022. Only 14.7 million people in the U.S. reported that they drink alcohol daily or almost daily in the same year.

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"A good 40% of current cannabis users are using it daily or near daily, a pattern that is more associated with tobacco use than typical alcohol use," Caulkins explained.

Both substances are dangerous to use excessively. In March, experts sat down with Fox News Digital to outline the dangers of smoking marijuana every day.

Massachusetts General Hospital data analyst Dr. Abra Jeffers stressed to Fox News Digital that marijuana is hazardous to use in excess.

"People think marijuana is harmless. It is not," she said. "We found that using marijuana (mostly by smoking) is as bad as smoking tobacco cigarettes."

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"While we reported the results for daily use, any use increases risk — with more days of use per month associated with higher risk," she added.

The National Cannabis Industry Association previously told Fox News Digital that cannabis is "is clearly safer than alcohol." But University of Colorado School of Medicine professor Dr. Robert Page also told Fox News that too much marijuana consumption can threaten heart health.

"Cannabis is not an innocent bystander when it comes to cardiovascular health," he said. "We do need to get out to the public the fact that there is a potential for these types of cardiovascular events and people need to make an informed decision."

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Marijuana can also negatively impact users' cognition and mental health, the doctor added.

"Cannabinoids have what we call psychotropic effects that affect your perception … and mental status," Page explained. "And like prescription medications that are psychotropic, they carry side effects."

The Colorado doctor advised that cannabis smokers be honest with their health care providers about their use, and that they should get medical approval before opting to use the drug every day.

"There needs to be shared decision-making between the patient and the provider with regard to cannabis use," he said. "Patient-centered, non-judgmental conversations are what is really needed."

The Associated Press and Fox News Digital's Angelica Stabile contributed to this report.

For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health.

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