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Marijuana Use Has A Positive Impact On Consumers’ Careers, Poll Says
Jul 24, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
A majority of marijuana consumers say their use of cannabis has had a
“positive” impact on their careers, according to a new poll.
The survey from the medical cannabis telehealth platform NuggMD posed the
question: “Has cannabis use had a positive or negative effect on your job
or career?”
Fifty-four percent of respondents said their marijuana consumption led to
positive developments in their careers, including 28 percent who described
it as “very positive.”
Just about 10 percent said using cannabis had a “negative” effect on their
jobs, while 36 percent said it had no impact at all.
“Prohibitionists are still trying desperately to sell the fiction that
access to cannabis causes workplace amotivation,” Andrew Graham, head of
communications at NuggMD, told Marijuana Moment. “Since they all tend to
read from the same tired playbook, it would not surprise me if the inverse
of that accusation were what’s actually true.”
Via NuggMD.
“That’s not exactly what the polling data here says, but that’s the
direction it’s pointing,” he said. “Wellness-focused employers need to get
smarter about how today’s workforce uses cannabis, because there’s mounting
evidence in favor of taking it seriously as a potential workplace benefit.”
The poll involved interviews with 493 marijuana consumers from July 3-20,
with a 4.4 percentage point margin of error.
While the survey itself is a subjective assessment about individual
cannabis users’ career experience, it further disrupts the prohibitionist
narrative about the potential harms of legalization for the workforce.
Several other studies have touched on the issue in different ways.
For example, in 2021 a partially federally funded study found that
adult-use legalization is associated with an increase in workforce
productivity and decrease in workplace injuries.
In 2023, researchers involved in a separate study found that workers who
use marijuana off the clock are no more likely to experience workplace
injuries compared to those who don’t consume cannabis at all, challenging
“overly broad” zero-tolerance employment policies.
A more recent study on marijuana legalization’s effect on workers’
compensation found that while the policy change is associated with a
“gradual increase” in workers’ comp claims, the average cost per claim in
fact fell after the policy change—as did patient use of prescription drugs,
especially opioids and other painkillers.
Separately, an analysis last year of five years’ worth of federal health
survey data by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) found that employees in the food service and hospitality
industries were some of the most common consumers of marijuana among U.S.
workers.
People in arts, design, entertainment, sports and media occupations also
reported comparatively high rates of past-month cannabis use, as did
workers in construction and extraction. Among those least likely to report
marijuana use, meanwhile, were law enforcement, health care providers and
workers in libraries and education.
*Photo courtesy of Martin Alonso.*
The post Marijuana Use Has A Positive Impact On Consumers’ Careers, Poll
Says appeared first on Marijuana Moment.