ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Saturday, December 27, 2025
For teens, any cannabis use may have impact on emotional health and academic performance - Psychology & Psychiatry - Pediatrics
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
Using marijuana just once or twice a month was associated with worse school
performance and emotional distress for teens, according to a large national
study of adolescents led by Ryan Sultán, an assistant professor of clinical
psychiatry at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons.
The more frequently teens used cannabis, the more likely they were to report
emotional distress and other social and academic problems.
"While previous studies have focused on the effects of frequent
cannabis use among teens, our study found that any amount of cannabis use at
all may put kids at risk of falling behind in school, and the kids using most
often may have the greatest risk," says Sultán, who studies adolescent
substance use.
"A few 'harmless' joints can snowball into real academic consequences.
Teens using it regularly often struggle to focus, miss school, and may lose
interest in their future plans."
Shifting trends in teen drug use
The new study arrives amid a national backdrop of shifting trends in teen
drug use. While use of many substances is at record lows among US youths,
cannabis remains an exception. About 1 in 5 high school
students currently use cannabis, and approximately 6% of 12th graders use it
daily—a rate that has increased in the past decade.
"The real-world impact can be dramatic," Sultán says. "It's
not uncommon for a young teen to smoke marijuana only a few times before
showing signs of withdrawal and worsening mood."
Scientists are especially concerned because today's cannabis products contain
two to three times more THC (the ingredient that causes a high) than in the
past, making them more potent. And previous studies have shown that using
cannabis during adolescence, when the
brain is still developing critical neural connections, may have lasting effects
on cognitive functions that are critical to academic performance.
"A teenager's brain is still developing the circuits for learning,
self-control, and emotional regulation," says Tim Becker, a child &
adolescent psychiatrist at Weill Cornell Medicine and study co-author.
"Using cannabis, even casually, during these critical growth periods
interferes with those processes and can derail normal development."
Study details
The new study analyzed data from a nationally
representative survey of over 160,000 U.S. 8th, 10th, and 12th grade
students conducted from 2018 to 2022. Over one-quarter of the respondents
reported cannabis use; less than 20% reported monthly or less frequent use; and
much smaller percentages said they used cannabis weekly or almost every day.
In the study, adolescents who used cannabis once or twice a month reported
higher rates of depression-like
symptoms, anxiety, and impulsive behavior than those who abstained. Near-daily
users were almost four times as likely to have poor grades and were frequently
disengaged from school activities. These associations were even stronger for
younger cannabis users.
What should parents and caregivers do?
Experts recommend having frank, nonjudgmental conversations with teens
about cannabis early and often.
"Make sure they understand that "natural" doesn't mean
"safe," Sultán says. "Parents also need to keep an eye out for
warning signs like declining grades, mood changes, or loss of interest in
hobbies—and consider that cannabis could be a factor."
"Cannabis Use Among US Adolescents" was published online in Pediatrics on Dec. 23.
Provided by Columbia University Irving Medical Center
by Columbia University Irving Medical Center
edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: For teens, any cannabis use may have impact on emotional health and academic performance

