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Health

5 years of legal cannabis: fewer charges, many hospitalizations and more than a few questions

At the five-year mark after legalization of cannabis, a look at what research tells us about the upsides and downsides for public health.

As retailers made it easier to buy cannabis, hospitalization numbers ticked upward

Cannabis use and hospitalizations up 5 years after legalization, researchers say

12 months ago
Duration 0:01
The number of Canadians using cannabis has increased by 25 per cent since it was legalized five years ago, a new commentary in the Canadian Medical Association Journal stated. But hospitalizations are also on the rise, prompting some doctors to say more information and better policies are needed to better mitigate negative outcomes.

When Canadalegalized the use of cannabis in October 2018 after decades of prohibition, the goals were to improve safety and public health as well as to reduce access by youth, crime and the illegal market.

Five years later, public health experts say legalization hasn't created any health benefits but it has been linked to some serious concerns.

Man smokes a joint on 4/20 in Toronto.
Cannabis is now widely available since being legalized in October 2018. (Heather Waldron/CBC )

Tuesday's issue of theCanadian Medical Association Journal includes a commentarytaking stock on what's happened with the legalization of non-medical cannabis. The paper doesn't examine agreater uptake of medical cannabis, which has been regulated by the government since 2001.

More than a quarter of Canadian adults 27 per centsay they use cannabis, up from 22 per cent in 2017, said author Benedikt Fischer, an adjunct professor at the Centre for Applied Research in Mental Health & Addiction at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

"Cannabis has been a widely available, normalized and even promoted product," Fischer said.

Benefits

Though the CMAJ commenters did not cite any direct health benefits from legalization, the paper notes the important social justice benefits from substantialreductions in criminal arrests andcharges, along with theassociated stigma.

Two-thirds of active cannabis users now get their cannabis from legal sources, according to the paper.

In Quebec, the minimum age to use cannabis wasupped to 21. The province alsointroduced other restrictions such as not allowing edibles that would appeal to young people, like gummies, candies and chocolate.

"I think there's some positive protective effects from that," Fischer said.

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How we get high | Science and Cannabis

2 years ago
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The previously-unknown endocannabinoid system is a big deal - it helps to balance all other body systems and it turns out bodies are perfectly primed for consuming cannabis.

Harms

After legalization, there was a large uptick in cannabis poisonings among young childrenin provinces where edibles were legal. These events were rare but highlighted the importance of child safety packaging.

But the increased availability of cannabis also led to other health concerns bringing people to hospital, says another new paper that studied the cannabis-attributablehospitalizations in four provinces, bothbefore and after legalization.

The study's authorscombedthrough hospitalization data on nearly seven million people aged 15 and up in Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia. Their findings were published Thursday in JAMA Network Open.

The palm of a hand holding a cannabis gummy candy next to a pouch with a warning label.
Cannabis edibles that would appeal to young people, like gummies, are regulated more strictly in Quebec than in other provinces. (Travis Dolynny/CBC)

There were 105,000 hospitalizations for cannabis over a seven-yearperiodfrom January 2015 through March 2021, the report says.One-third wereamong people aged 15 to 24, while nearly 70,000, or 66 per cent, were among males.

The study focused on three time periods: pre-legalization (January 2015 to September 2018);post-legalization with product and store restrictions (October 2018 to February 2020);and post-legalization with commercialization, resulting in more stores and product access (March 2020 to March 2021). The latter period overlapped with the COVID-19 pandemic.

During the early years of legalization, with tightly controlled products and limited store access, the rate of hospitalizations didn't notably change.However, data suggests that the commercial period was accompanied by an increasein cannabis hospitalizations, particularly amongpeople aged25 years and older, the study's authors said.

Going from a couple of cannabis stores in a city to hundreds increased availability, which can lead to overuse problems, said lead author Daniel Myran, a family physician with the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.

From his work in public health and as a researcher, Myran said people,mostly young men,commonly show up in emergency departments after using cannabis because they're experiencing withdrawal or are intoxicated but not displaying cannabis-related psychosis. Myran said they are at risk slight but there of developing a serious mental disorder.

"They have almost a two per cent risk of developing schizophrenia within three years," said Myran. In comparison to the general population, the risk is well below one per cent.

Cannabis-induced psychosishad the largest relative increase for hospitalizations, the study said.

Female psychiatrist stands by a scanner.
The increasing potency of cannabis sold now is an important concern given the increased availability, says Romina Mizrahi, a psychiatrist and McGill University professor. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Both genes and environmental factors predispose some people to using cannabis and to developing schizophrenia.Myron said more research is needed to understand the risk, calling itan area that is under-discussed.

The increasing potency of cannabis sold after commercialization matters, said Romina Mizrahi,a psychiatristand professor at McGill University in Montreal. She wasn't involved in the research.

If legalization is done correctly, users would receive important information on how much psychoactive tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) they're ingesting.

"When we talk to patients, we explain what this means," Mizrahi said. "We ask them to take a look at what they buy."

Using cannabis can also be risky during pregnancy. Myran pointed to a previous study on people treated for cannabis-use disorder in Ontario. The results suggested a doubling in the rate of poor outcomes in newbornsamong the less than one per cent of pregnancy visits to hospital for cannabis use,compared with cannabis-free pregnancies.

Mixed or uncertain

The CMAJpapernoted that impaired driving related to cannabis appeared to be the same or slightly down from pre-legalization levels. In B.C., however, the proportion of drivers admitted to hospital after vehicle collisions who tested positive for THC increased after legalization, Fischer and his team said.

Impaired driving numbers could be lower as a result people not venturing out of their homes during theCOVID pandemic.

Myran calls the effects of legalization an unfinished story.

Doctors and scientists want better tracking on the demand for treatment for cannabis use disorders and how people may be substituting other substances to get high.

Said Myran: "Our data, while not conclusive, is hinting that as the market expands, when you see greater levels of market maturity, new products, that you do see these increases in cannabis harms."

With files from CBC's Christine Birak