IKANN WELLNESS

Cannabis & Marijuana Addiction Treatment for Women in Fort Lauderdale

It's Just Weed — Until It Isn't: Reclaim Your Clarity, Your Emotions, and Your Life

Cannabis has been normalized, legalized, and marketed as harmless — but for a significant number of women, what started as occasional use has become something they can no longer control. Cannabis use disorder is a real, clinically recognized condition, and the fact that society minimizes it makes it harder, not easier, to seek help. If your relationship with cannabis has moved from choice to compulsion, you are not weak and you are not imagining the problem.

Daily cannabis use changes the brain — altering the endocannabinoid system, disrupting emotional regulation, impairing motivation and cognition, and creating a dependency cycle that feels impossible to break alone. At IKANN Wellness, we provide compassionate, evidence-based cannabis addiction treatment for women in Fort Lauderdale without the shame or dismissiveness that too many women encounter when they try to talk about their cannabis use. Your struggle is valid, and effective treatment exists.

What Is Cannabis Use Disorder?

Compassionate cannabis use disorder therapy at IKANN Wellness Fort Lauderdale

Cannabis use disorder (CUD) is a clinical diagnosis recognized in the DSM-5, characterized by a problematic pattern of cannabis use leading to significant impairment or distress. Despite widespread cultural messaging that marijuana is harmless, the neurobiological evidence is clear: approximately 9% of people who try cannabis develop a use disorder, and among those who use daily, the rate rises to 25–50%. With today's cannabis products containing THC concentrations of 60–90% in concentrates — compared to 3–5% in the marijuana of the 1980s — the potency of what people are consuming has changed dramatically, and so has the risk of dependence.

Women are more sensitive to cannabinoids than men, likely due to estrogen's modulation of the endocannabinoid system and THC metabolism. This means women may develop dependence faster, experience more intense withdrawal symptoms, and find it harder to quit. Hormonal fluctuations across the menstrual cycle, during pregnancy, and through perimenopause can all influence cannabis sensitivity and the severity of use patterns. These biological realities are not widely discussed, and many women are surprised to learn that their experience with cannabis is shaped by sex-specific factors.

The normalization of cannabis makes it uniquely difficult to recognize when use has become a problem. Unlike alcohol or opioids, where cultural narratives at least acknowledge the possibility of addiction, cannabis is surrounded by messaging that it is natural, medicinal, and non-addictive. Women who are struggling with cannabis use disorder often face dismissiveness from friends, family, and even healthcare providers — "It's just weed" — which compounds the shame and isolation that already accompany the loss of control. If everyone around you insists that what you are using cannot be a problem, it becomes extraordinarily difficult to trust your own experience that something is wrong.

The mental health consequences of chronic cannabis use are significant and bidirectional. Cannabis use worsens anxiety and depression over time even when it provides short-term relief, impairs working memory and executive function, contributes to amotivational syndrome, and disrupts sleep architecture despite its sedating effects. For women who began using cannabis to manage anxiety, insomnia, or emotional pain, the substance that once helped has often become part of the problem — creating a cycle where the very symptoms cannabis was meant to treat are now maintained and worsened by continued use.

🧑‍⚕️ Free Confidential Consultation — Take the first step today. Call (786) 504-7626 to speak with a compassionate member of our team — no obligation, no judgment.

Signs and Symptoms of Cannabis Use Disorder

Using more than intended: consuming larger amounts of cannabis or using over longer periods than you planned, with a sense that use has taken on a life of its own
Persistent desire to cut down with repeated failed attempts to reduce or stop use, despite genuine motivation to change
Significant time devoted to obtaining, using, or recovering from cannabis — including time lost to being high, foggy, or unmotivated when you intended to be productive
Continuing despite harms: ongoing use despite recognizing negative effects on relationships, work performance, parenting, physical health, or emotional wellbeing
Using to manage emotions or function: relying on cannabis to cope with anxiety, fall asleep, manage stress, regulate mood, or get through daily tasks that feel unmanageable without it
Tolerance: needing progressively more cannabis — higher potency products, larger amounts, or more frequent use — to achieve the same effect
Withdrawal symptoms when reducing or stopping: irritability, anxiety, insomnia, decreased appetite, restlessness, depressed mood, and physical discomfort beginning within 24–48 hours of last use
Using despite aggravated psychiatric symptoms: continued use even when cannabis is clearly worsening anxiety, depression, paranoia, or cognitive difficulties
Cognitive changes: noticeable impairment in memory, concentration, motivation, or mental clarity that you attribute to cannabis use but feel unable to address
Social and occupational impacts: withdrawal from activities, relationships, or responsibilities that were once important to you, replaced by increasing isolation and cannabis use

Our Approach to Cannabis Addiction Treatment

We recognize that daily cannabis use almost always serves a function — managing anxiety, facilitating sleep, numbing emotional pain, or providing a sense of calm in an overwhelming world. Effective cannabis addiction recovery requires addressing both the dependency itself and building genuine alternatives for the needs cannabis has been meeting. Our cannabis treatment is part of IKANN Wellness's comprehensive addiction treatment program, designed specifically for women's biology, psychology, and life circumstances.

Mindfulness-based cannabis addiction recovery for women at IKANN Wellness

Addressing the Conditions Cannabis Has Been Managing

Most women with cannabis use disorder are also managing anxiety, depression, insomnia, trauma, or chronic stress — and cannabis has been their primary coping tool. Our integrated clinical team treats these underlying conditions directly and simultaneously with evidence-based interventions: CBT for anxiety and depression, EMDR therapy for trauma processing, DBT for emotional regulation, and mindfulness-based approaches for stress management. The fear that stopping cannabis will leave you unable to cope is understandable — and it is one of the most important things we address in treatment. Most women find that their anxiety and sleep improve substantially within weeks of stopping, as the neurochemical disruption caused by chronic cannabis use begins to resolve.

Motivational Work and Ambivalence

Cultural normalization of cannabis creates a unique form of ambivalence that other substance use disorders do not face in the same way. When everyone around you insists that cannabis is harmless, questioning your own use requires going against the cultural grain. Motivational interviewing helps women examine their ambivalence honestly, explore the gap between their values and their current relationship with cannabis, and connect with their own reasons for change — without pressure, judgment, or the dismissiveness they may have encountered elsewhere.

Building New Coping Strategies

Long-term cannabis use often impairs the development or maintenance of other coping strategies. When cannabis has been the go-to response for every difficult emotion, stressful situation, or sleepless night, the repertoire of alternative coping skills may be limited. Our treatment builds a diverse, sustainable toolkit: DBT distress tolerance and emotion regulation skills, mindfulness practices, sleep hygiene and CBT-I techniques, physical wellness strategies, and interpersonal effectiveness skills. Through individual therapy and group work, women develop the capacity to navigate life's challenges without reaching for cannabis as the default response.

Treatment Modalities for Cannabis Use Disorder

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Identifying and restructuring the thought patterns, beliefs, and cognitive distortions that maintain cannabis use — including the minimization and rationalization that cultural normalization reinforces.

Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET)

A structured, time-limited approach that helps women resolve ambivalence about cannabis use, strengthen internal motivation for change, and develop a personalized change plan grounded in their own values and goals.

EMDR Therapy

Processing traumatic memories and the emotional pain that cannabis has been numbing, allowing genuine neurological healing and reducing the trauma-driven need for self-medication.

DBT Skills Training

Developing distress tolerance, emotional regulation, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness skills that replace cannabis as the primary strategy for managing difficult emotions and situations.

Sleep Intervention (CBT-I)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia addresses the sleep disruption that is both a driver of cannabis use and a prominent withdrawal symptom, restoring natural sleep architecture without chemical dependence.

Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention (MBRP)

Teaching women to observe cannabis cravings as temporary mental events rather than imperatives to act, building the capacity to sit with discomfort and choose a different response.

Group Therapy (Women-Only)

Peer support, shame reduction, and the powerful experience of being believed and understood by other women who know what it is like to struggle with a substance the world insists is harmless.

Psychiatric Evaluation

Comprehensive assessment for co-occurring conditions including ADHD, anxiety disorders, depression, and other psychiatric conditions that may be driving cannabis use, with integrated treatment through our dual diagnosis program.

Levels of Care for Cannabis Treatment

Flexible

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

IOP is appropriate for most women with cannabis use disorder, providing structured treatment with real-world practice of new coping skills. With 3 hours per session, three to five days per week, and evening scheduling available, IOP allows women to maintain work and family responsibilities while building the skills and support needed for sustained recovery.

Co-Occurring Conditions

Cannabis use disorder frequently co-occurs with the following conditions, all addressed within our integrated dual diagnosis treatment model:

Generalized anxiety disorder
Major depressive disorder
PTSD and complex trauma
ADHD
Insomnia and sleep disorders
Bipolar disorder
Cannabis-induced anxiety/psychosis
Eating disorders
Social anxiety disorder
Chronic pain conditions

Insurance & Getting Started

We accept most major insurance plans for cannabis addiction treatment. The Affordable Care Act requires most insurance plans to cover substance use disorder treatment. Call (786) 504-7626 or email office@ikannwellness.com to verify your benefits confidentially. Visit our insurance verification page for more details.

Start Your Journey to Healing Today

The clarity you have been looking for isn't at the bottom of a bowl — it is waiting for you in the life you deserve. Let us help you find it.

Frequently Asked Questions — Cannabis Addiction Treatment

Can you really get addicted to marijuana?
Yes. Cannabis use disorder is a recognized DSM-5 clinical diagnosis with well-established neurobiological evidence. Approximately 9% of people who try cannabis and up to 50% of daily users develop a use disorder. Cannabis withdrawal is real, producing irritability, anxiety, insomnia, and mood disturbance. The cultural narrative that marijuana is non-addictive is not supported by the clinical evidence — and it causes real harm to people who are struggling and cannot get the validation or help they need.
I use cannabis for anxiety and sleep — how will I manage without it?
The early weeks can be uncomfortable, which is why structured treatment with concurrent anxiety and sleep intervention is essential. With CBT, CBT-I for insomnia, and appropriate support, most women find their anxiety and sleep improve substantially within 4–8 weeks — often better than when using, as cannabis-driven neurochemical disruption resolves. The fear of being unable to cope without cannabis is one of the most common barriers to seeking help, and it is one of the most important things we address in treatment. You will not be left without tools — we build real, sustainable alternatives before and during the transition away from cannabis.
I use medical marijuana with a prescription. Does that mean I have an addiction?
A medical marijuana card does not prevent cannabis use disorder, just as a prescription does not prevent opioid use disorder. If use has escalated, feels compulsive, or is causing distress or life impairment, cannabis use disorder may be present regardless of legal status. The distinction between medical use and problematic use is not always clear-cut, and many women find themselves in a gray area where what began as medical use has evolved into something they can no longer control. Our assessment will clarify the clinical picture without judgment — and if treatment is appropriate, we will help you find better ways to manage the conditions cannabis was originally prescribed for.
How long does cannabis withdrawal last?
Cannabis withdrawal begins within 24–48 hours of stopping heavy use and peaks at days 2–4. Most acute symptoms — irritability, anxiety, insomnia, decreased appetite, and restlessness — resolve within one to two weeks, though sleep disturbance may persist longer. With structured treatment support including CBT-I for sleep, mindfulness for anxiety, and clinical monitoring, most women find withdrawal significantly more manageable than anticipated. The anticipation of withdrawal is often worse than the experience itself when proper support is in place.
Is cannabis worse for women than for men?
Research suggests women are more sensitive to cannabinoids, likely due to estrogen's modulation of the endocannabinoid system. Women may develop dependence faster, experience more intense withdrawal, and show greater cognitive effects from chronic use. Women are also more likely to use cannabis for anxiety and pain management rather than recreationally, which creates different treatment needs. These sex-specific differences are why women-focused treatment that understands female biology and psychology produces better outcomes than generic, mixed-gender programs.

Start Your Journey to Healing Today

The clarity you have been looking for isn't at the bottom of a bowl — it is waiting for you in the life you deserve. Let us help you find it.

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(786) 504,7626 office@ikannwellness.com