Marijuana Treatment Admission Statistics

Warbux

New Member
The new numbers are out from SAMHSA, so expect a variety of efforts to get the press to report that marijuana is so dangerous that more and more people are being admitted to treatment for marijuana addiction.

Which, of course, is a complete misreading of the facts (or lie, if you prefer).

Some preliminary reporting is now coming out:

Marijuana admissions rose from 13 percent of total admissions in 1998 to 17 percent in 2008…
But as Paul Armentano notes:

In 2008, 57 percent of persons referred to treatment for marijuana as their ‘primary substance of abuse,’ were referred by the criminal justice system. For adolescents, nearly half (48 percent) were referred via the criminal justice system.

By contrast, criminal justice referrals accounted for just 37 percent of the overall total of drug treatment admissions in 2008.

“Primary marijuana admissions were less likely than all admissions combined to be self-referred to treatment,” the study found.

Of course, this is not news to us. But I’ve gone through and re-analyzed the data, using the new 2008 figures, cross-referencing primary substance with principal source of referral. Here are the results.

Look at the chart on that page and you’ll immediately see that for marijuana, not only were 57% of those admitted referred by criminal justice, but only 15% were self-referred (including individual, family, friends). And that 15% also includes people who voluntarily signed up for treatment so it would look better to the judge.

For comparison (just showing the two referral categories for a select set of drugs):

Individual Criminal Justice
Alcohol 30.2 39.3
******* 32.6 32.6
Marijuana 15.0 57.0
****** 55.6 14.7

So when the 2010 National Drug Control Strategy spends an entire chapter talking about the need for more treatment opportunities and better treatment opportunities for those in trouble, the drug czar’s office should be taking the blame for policies that lead to wasting a significant portion of the treatment resources that currently exist.

Remember that

According to federal figures compiled by SAMHSA in 2009, some 37 percent of the estimated 288,000 thousand people who entered drug treatment for cannabis in 2007 had not reported using it in the 30 days previous to their admission. Another 16 percent of those admitted said that they’d used marijuana three times or fewer in the month prior to their admission.

If any treatment professionals are reading this post, I’d love to hear your reactions to this data. I would also like it if you could answer a question I’ve been wanting to ask:

If you accept criminal justice referrals, how many of them (where payment was no problem) have you refused because they didn’t actually need treatment, but were there simply to avoid punishment?



News Hawk: Warbux 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Drugwarrant.com
Author: Pete Guither
Contact: Drug WarRant
Copyright: 2010 drugwarrant.com
Website: Marijuana Treatment Admission Statistics - Drug WarRant
 
The new numbers are out from SAMHSA, so expect a variety of efforts to get the press to report that marijuana is so dangerous that more and more people are being admitted to treatment for marijuana addiction.

Which, of course, is a complete misreading of the facts (or lie, if you prefer).

Some preliminary reporting is now coming out:

Marijuana admissions rose from 13 percent of total admissions in 1998 to 17 percent in 2008...
But as Paul Armentano notes:

In 2008, 57 percent of persons referred to treatment for marijuana as their 'primary substance of abuse,' were referred by the criminal justice system. For adolescents, nearly half (48 percent) were referred via the criminal justice system.

By contrast, criminal justice referrals accounted for just 37 percent of the overall total of drug treatment admissions in 2008.

"Primary marijuana admissions were less likely than all admissions combined to be self-referred to treatment," the study found.

Of course, this is not news to us. But I've gone through and re-analyzed the data, using the new 2008 figures, cross-referencing primary substance with principal source of referral. Here are the results.

Look at the chart on that page and you'll immediately see that for marijuana, not only were 57% of those admitted referred by criminal justice, but only 15% were self-referred (including individual, family, friends). And that 15% also includes people who voluntarily signed up for treatment so it would look better to the judge.

For comparison (just showing the two referral categories for a select set of drugs):

Individual Criminal Justice
Alcohol 30.2 39.3
******* 32.6 32.6
Marijuana 15.0 57.0
****** 55.6 14.7

So when the 2010 National Drug Control Strategy spends an entire chapter talking about the need for more treatment opportunities and better treatment opportunities for those in trouble, the drug czar's office should be taking the blame for policies that lead to wasting a significant portion of the treatment resources that currently exist.

Remember that

According to federal figures compiled by SAMHSA in 2009, some 37 percent of the estimated 288,000 thousand people who entered drug treatment for cannabis in 2007 had not reported using it in the 30 days previous to their admission. Another 16 percent of those admitted said that they'd used marijuana three times or fewer in the month prior to their admission.

If any treatment professionals are reading this post, I'd love to hear your reactions to this data. I would also like it if you could answer a question I've been wanting to ask:

If you accept criminal justice referrals, how many of them (where payment was no problem) have you refused because they didn't actually need treatment, but were there simply to avoid punishment?



News Hawk: Warbux 420 MAGAZINE
Source: Drugwarrant.com
Author: Pete Guither
Contact: Drug WarRant
Copyright: 2010 drugwarrant.com
Website: Marijuana Treatment Admission Statistics - Drug WarRant
For me, the big question is who owns those rehibilitation centers !! Ha !! And who profits from the referals ?? I believe some of them are owned by politicians, and more than likely, judges, or close relatives of judges and politicians !! Same with all drug treatment centers, including the ones for acohol !! They hang up a big fancy sign, and run adds on tv, depicting it as like a vacation spa, but they're just another warehouse for the poor inocent people who get caught up in their webb lies !! Just another way of bilking more $$$ our of the tax payers !! If they really wanted to help people, then they'd stop arresting people, and breaking up familys !! And lieing to the public about that KILLER WEED !! They are the real criminals !! And they are afraid this california legalization bill is gonna pass !! As Ca. goes, so will the rest of nation !!
 
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