Minnesota legalized recreational cannabis for adults in this year, making it the 23rd state to do so.
What is 2023?
THC mimics this naturally occurring brain chemical, which plays a role in memory, appetite, mood, and pain.
What is anandamide (or endocannabinoids)?
For people in SUD recovery, using cannabis can trigger this phenomenon where the brain craves the primary drug of choice more intensely.
What is cross-addiction or cue-triggered craving?
This widely used model describes five stages a person moves through when changing a behavior — from not considering change to maintaining it long-term.
What is the Stages of Change (Transtheoretical Model / Prochaska)?
Minnesota's medical cannabis program currently certifies patients for conditions including PTSD, chronic pain, and this degenerative neurological disease.
What is ALS, MS, or other qualifying conditions (e.g. Alzheimer's, obstructive sleep apnea)?
What is 2 ounces (about 56 grams)?
Heavy cannabis use before this age is associated with lasting changes in memory and executive function due to ongoing brain development.
What is age 25?
This percentage of people who try cannabis will develop a cannabis use disorder — rising significantly with daily use.
What is about 9% overall (up to 25–50% for daily users)?
In recovery, HALT is an acronym used to identify four internal triggers for relapse — they are these.
What is Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired?
CBD-based medication approved by the FDA for pediatric epilepsy that is also available through Minnesota's medical program.
What is Epidiolex (cannabidiol)?
Minnesota's medical cannabis program requires patients to have one of these before purchasing — similar to a prescription.
What is a patient certification from a licensed provider?
Cannabis use disorder involves changes to this brain region responsible for reward and motivation.
What is the nucleus accumbens (reward pathway / limbic system)?
Many 12-step programs and sober living homes in Minnesota follow this standard regarding cannabis, regardless of its legal status.
What is complete abstinence (cannabis-free policy)?
This type of plan, developed collaboratively in IOP, outlines a client's warning signs, coping strategies, and support contacts to use before a relapse occurs.
What is a relapse prevention plan?
Medical cannabis is frequently used to manage this type of pain — caused by nerve damage — that often does not respond well to opioids.
What is neuropathic pain?
Even with legalized cannabis in Minnesota, people in this legal status may face serious immigration consequences for any cannabis use.
What is non-citizen / undocumented or visa status?
Withdrawal from cannabis can include irritability, sleep problems, decreased appetite, and this uncomfortable symptom often underestimated in treatment.
What is anxiety or restlessness?
In Minnesota IOP, discussing cannabis use openly matters because it affects this core treatment document.
What is the treatment plan?
Peer recovery support specialists in Minnesota are people with lived experience of SUD who provide this kind of support — distinct from clinical services.
What is non-clinical peer support (coaching, mentoring, community connection)?
This route of medical cannabis delivery is preferred for patients who need fast-acting relief but want to avoid combustion and its harmful byproducts.
What is vaporization (vaping)?
This Minnesota state agency oversees both the medical and recreational cannabis programs as of 2024.
What is the Office of Cannabis Management (OCM)?
Using cannabis to manage anxiety or emotional pain is called this — a pattern common in people with co-occurring disorders.
What is self-medication?
Edible cannabis products are associated with this risk because the delayed onset causes people to take more than intended.
What is accidental overconsumption / greening out?
Regular participation in this free, community-based support group — with many meetings across the Twin Cities metro — is a common recovery maintenance tool.
What is AA, NA, SMART Recovery, or other peer support groups?
When a client in IOP holds a valid medical cannabis certification, clinicians should discuss this — the tension between legal medical use and individual recovery goals.
What is the impact on their recovery / whether medical cannabis use is consistent with their sobriety goals?