ABSTRACT

Winner of the Donald W. Light Award for the Applied or Public Practice of Medical Sociology

Medical marijuana laws have spread across the U.S. to all but a handful of states. Yet, eighty years of social stigma and federal prohibition creates dilemmas for patients who participate in state programs.

The Medicalization of Marijuana takes the first comprehensive look at how patients negotiate incomplete medicalization and what their experiences reveal about our relationship with this controversial plant as it is incorporated into biomedicine. Is cannabis used similarly to other medicines? Drawing on interviews with midlife patients in Colorado, a state at the forefront of medical cannabis implementation, this book explores the practical decisions individuals confront about medical use, including whether cannabis will work for them; the risks of registering in a state program; and how to handle questions of supply, dosage, and routines of use.

Individual stories capture how patients redefine and reclaim cannabis use as legitimate—individually and collectively—and grapple with an inherently political identity. These experiences help illustrate how stigma, prejudice, and social change operate.

By positioning cannabis use within sociological models of medical behavior, Newhart and Dolphin provide a wide-reaching, theoretically informed analysis of the issue that expands established concepts and provides new insight on medical cannabis and how state programs work.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

A Tale of Two Patients

chapter Chapter 1|32 pages

The Social Construction of Cannabis Use

chapter Chapter 2|25 pages

The Landscape of Cannabis Policy

chapter Chapter 3|14 pages

Becoming a Patient

chapter Chapter 4|31 pages

Cannabis and the Doctor–Patient Interaction

chapter Chapter 5|12 pages

Medical Cannabis Use in Everyday Life

chapter 6|25 pages

Changing the Set

Creating Medical Routines of Cannabis Use

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

The Power of Place

Changes to Setting

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

Stereotypes, Stigma, and Mitigating Risk

chapter Chapter 9|27 pages

Strategies for Managing and Changing Cannabis Stigma

chapter Chapter 10|25 pages

Beyond Medicalization

Healthism and Pharmaceuticalization

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

Medicalization and the Future of Cannabis Medicine