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A new Canadian study just raised eyebrows—and concern.
Published April 14, 2025 in JAMA Neurology, the research analyzed records from over 6 million adults in Ontario, tracking dementia diagnoses following hospital visits for cannabis-related issues.
The takeaway? A significant association between weed and dementia risk. But here’s the catch: it’s not the whole story.
Risk Goes Up
Use is Surging
Bottom Line: Heavy cannabis use among older adults is rising fast—and so are potential health risks tied to weed and dementia risk.
This isn’t a smoking gun.
Translation: The findings apply to heavy, problem users—not casual tokers. Claims about weed and dementia risk need context.
Researchers propose a few theories:
Takeaway: It’s not just what weed does—it’s what happens because of heavy use.
The research was:
Major outlets—CNN, NYT, MedPage Today—covered it. Some X users criticized the framing, calling it alarmist, but no one’s doubting the study’s rigor.
Key Point: It’s a high-quality study—just not the final word on weed and dementia risk.
Summary: The debate isn’t going away—and this study fuels it.
This study is a wake-up call, not a doomsday verdict.
It shows some older adults, under specific conditions, face higher dementia risks after severe cannabis-related health events.
But it doesn’t say moderate weed use causes dementia for everyone.