The percentage of people needing hospital treatment after taking cannabis has reached a 10-year high.
The rate of those hospitalised after using marijuana is also higher than for people who had taken the Class A drug cocaine – with 913 hospital stays compared to just 553.
Despite the national rise, the number of people requiring treatment after taking cannabis actually fell in Courier Country last year.
In Fife, of those admitted for taking drugs, 15.6% – the equivalent of 79 people – had taken the narcotic, compared to 19.2% the year before.
In Tayside, 11% of drug-related treatments were for those who had taken cannabis in 2014/15 – but that dropped to just 6.9% – or 29 people – last year.
The Scottish Conservatives said the figures showed that cannabis should not be legalised – but the Scottish Liberal Democrats disagreed.
Highlands and Islands MSP and Tory justice spokesman Douglas Ross said: “These figures show very clearly that cannabis is not the harmless substance some would have us believe.
“It’s quite alarming that quite so many people are being hospitalised through using cannabis, a drug many people feel authorities are going soft on.
“And not only is it dangerous in its own right, as these statistics prove, but it’s a gateway drug to even more harmful substances.”
Mr Ross said the country faced a “massive fight” to stem the flow of illegal drugs on Scotland’s streets.
He added: “Now is not the time to give in and wave the white flag.
“We need to crack down on those circulating drugs of all kinds on our streets, and reinforce the message about just how damaging taking these substances can be.”
But the Scottish Liberal Democrats health spokesman Alex Cole-Hamilton disagreed.
He said: “It is concerning to see these figures rise, however the Conservatives solution is completely wrong and regressive.
“If anything these figures show that the Lib Dems have been right in calling for this dark market to be brought out of the shadows.
“If the Tories had their way then they would drive the market further underground exposing people to more dangerous drugs and endangering more lives leading to more hospitalisations.
“The answer is to educate and regulate not to punish as the Tories want to do.”
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