Vaping Candy Flavored THC Seemed So Harmless.

Reports of Behavioral Disorders & Even Psychosis Suggest Otherwise.

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Please contact us for a confidential consult if you or your teen experienced issues after using STIIIZY THC Pens.

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STIIIZY Lawsuit

Targeting Teens Meant Increased Profits at The Risk of Kids’ Lives.

Using STIIIZY THC Pens (or “Dab pens”) is a surging trend in the U.S. affecting more and more teens with scary side effects. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) estimates at least 16.3 million people had a THC use disorder in 2021.1 That’s 7 times more than reported in 2013,2 with growing ER hospital visits for both medical and mental emergencies in adolescents.3

The surge in concerning side effects in teenagers is being attributed to this perfect storm:

Higher THC concentrations in Vaping

Marketing to teenagers via colorful, fun flavors

The younger, developing brain’s negative reaction to THC

Equals problems that can permanently affect a teen’s future.

Please contact us for a confidential consult if you or your child experienced mental issues after using Stiiizy THC pens.

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“This isn’t the cannabis of 20, 30 years ago,” said Dr. Deepali Gershan, an addiction psychiatrist in Chicago. Up to 20% of her caseload is patients for whom she suspects cannabis use triggered a psychotic episode.

Why Are THC (“Dab”) Pens So Dangerous?

In 1980, illegal marijuana typically contained around 1.5% tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).5 Today, cannabis products contain unregulated amounts of THC. Add that to the power of vaping vs smoking and you have a wildly unpredictable and dangerous high.

What most adults think of as smoking weed is not even comparable to the potent high that kids are getting through vaping.

Vaping THC delivers a far more powerful punch than smoking it or eating gummies because THC, the same psychoactive drug in marijuana, is concentrated in vaping oils delivered via heated cartridges.6 In 1995, the average concentration of THC in cannabis was about 4%, but The New York Times printed in June 2023 that current levels are close to 100% THC7 – higher doses are more likely to produce anxiety, agitation, paranoia, and psychosis.8

The reason vaping is the most potent method of ingesting cannabis is because of its (virtually) unregulated THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, content.9 In addition, flavored cannabis is not distasteful to new users, subtly encouraging teens to feel it’s safe when the actual taste may have discouraged use.

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A short list of

manufacturers targeting teens includes:

STIIIZY

Filamin

DIME

Cookies

Cake

FRYD

Issues of Real Concern

In the 12-25 age bracket, NIH has confirmed a connection between large dosage THC use and psychotropic conditions including:

  • Cannabis induced psychosis

  • Agitation/Anxiety/Paranoia

  • Obsessive ideation

  • Depression

  • Social phobia

  • Seeing and hearing things that are not there

  • Suicidal thoughts and attempts increase with the potency of cannabis

The False Sense of Safety Particularly Appeals to Youth – and Even Parents

While our culture is increasingly accepting of marijuana as a “natural” alternative to other means of quelling anxiety, treating insomnia, and even pain relief, medical research is clear that there are issues.

Johns Hopkins researchers studied a small group of infrequent cannabis users in 2018 and found that vaping cannabis, instead of smoking it or eating gummies, increased the rate of short-term anxiety, paranoia, memory loss, and distraction when THC doses were the same.11

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Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein and the STIIIZY Lawsuit

A Case for Justice is working with the prominent national law firm of Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein (LCHB) to educate families about the STIIIZY lawsuit.

We are proud to work alongside LCHB as they are leaders in the battle against STIIIZY and other vaping manufacturers who put our kids at risk. In 2023, the law firm announced a historic $235 million settlement with Altria in an important JUUL e-cigarette youth nicotine vaping litigation alleging predatory advertising, fraud, addiction, and injury.

A Case for Justice

Since our founding, A Case for Justice has helped thousands of sex assault survivors in cases such as Larry Nassar, Rideshare assaults and Dr. Robert Anderson access powerful, contingency-fee legal services. There is no charge to you for our services. We are an affiliate of A Case for Women, LLC, which also operates the non-profit A Fund for Women.

ACFJ is a safe, confidential place to tell your story and seek justice. The legal representation is done on a contingency fee basis, meaning you do not have to pay anything to get started. There is zero obligation to talk to us, and everything is confidential. The power is in your hands.

If you’d like us to look into your legal options, the best way to get started is by submitting a response on our official website. If you already have or you have further questions, you can contact us at (866) 488-4786. Or submit the form to learn more about your legal options.

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Sources

  1. Sandee LaMotte (2021). Vaping marijuana by teens doubles in last seven years, with potentially harmful consequences, study says. CNN.
  2. Sharma, P., Mathews, D. B., Nguyen, Q. A., Rossmann, G. L., A Patten, C., & Hammond, C. J. (2023). Old Dog, New Tricks: A Review of Identifying and Addressing Youth Cannabis Vaping in the Pediatric Clinical Setting. Clinical medicine insights. Pediatrics, 17, 11795565231162297.
  3. CDC. (2023). Cannabis-involved emergency department visits among persons aged <25 years before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
  4. Wernau, J. (2024). More teens who use marijuana are suffering psychosis. The Wall Street Journal.
  5. Joyce K. Klu, Jane A. Oliver, Alexandra Park, Roy Mudie, Niamh NicDaeid (2021). Measurement uncertainty in quantifying delta-9 tetrahydroccabinol (THC) in blood using SPE and LC/MS/MS.  NIH/PubMed.
  6. Kevin Haggerty, Ph.D. (2020). Cannabis Concentration and Health Risks. Addictions, Drug & Alcohol Institute.
  7. Canon, C. (2023). Psychosis, addiction, chronic vomiting: as weed becomes more potent, teens are getting sick. The New York Times.
  8. HHS. (2019). U.S. Surgeon General’s advisory: marijuana use and the developing brain. Ibid. New York Times.
  9. NIDA. (2021). What are marijuana’s effects.
  10. Johns Hopkins. (2018). “Vaping cannabis produces stronger effects than smoking cannabis for infrequent users.”