Updated
Updated · theargumentmag.com · Jul 15
Faulty 2018 Study Inflated CHS Cases to 2.8 Million in US Media
Updated
Updated · theargumentmag.com · Jul 15

Faulty 2018 Study Inflated CHS Cases to 2.8 Million in US Media

1 articles · Updated · theargumentmag.com · Jul 15

Summary

  • A widely cited claim that about 2.8 million Americans suffer cannabis hyperemesis syndrome each year traces to a debunked 2018 study, not solid national evidence.
  • That estimate spread through major outlets including The Washington Post and The New York Times, which used it to frame CHS as a large-scale consequence of heavy marijuana use.
  • The critique says the paper relied on a poorly sampled study group and an overly broad definition of CHS, turning a rarely diagnosed condition into an implausibly common one.
  • The dispute matters because the figure has shaped coverage and arguments for tighter marijuana regulation, despite weak evidence behind the headline number.

Insights

With cannabis potency soaring, how can users assess their real risk of developing severe vomiting syndrome CHS?
A faulty study misled news outlets on cannabis sickness. How can we trust public health data in media?
As 'scromiting' cases surge, are health systems equipped to track the true scale of this cannabis-related crisis?