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. 2006 Jan 12:1:2.
doi: 10.1186/1747-597X-1-2.

Cannabis, motivation, and life satisfaction in an internet sample

Affiliations

Cannabis, motivation, and life satisfaction in an internet sample

Sara Smucker Barnwell et al. Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. .

Abstract

Although little evidence supports cannabis-induced amotivational syndrome, sources continue to assert that the drug saps motivation 1, which may guide current prohibitions. Few studies report low motivation in chronic users; another reveals that they have higher subjective wellbeing. To assess differences in motivation and subjective wellbeing, we used a large sample (N = 487) and strict definitions of cannabis use (7 days/week) and abstinence (never). Standard statistical techniques showed no differences. Robust statistical methods controlling for heteroscedasticity, non-normality and extreme values found no differences in motivation but a small difference in subjective wellbeing. Medical users of cannabis reporting health problems tended to account for a significant portion of subjective wellbeing differences, suggesting that illness decreased wellbeing. All p-values were above p = .05. Thus, daily use of cannabis does not impair motivation. Its impact on subjective wellbeing is small and may actually reflect lower wellbeing due to medical symptoms rather than actual consumption of the plant.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Motivation Scores Means, Medians and Trimmed Means Comparisons.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Subjective Well-being Scores Means, Medians and Trimmed Means Comparisons.

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