The first guidelines for the safer use of the marijuana in Canada have been issued by researchers
The first guidelines for the safer use of the marijuana in Canada have been issued by researchers who are arguing for a public health response to blunt widespread use of the illegal narcotic. "Given the prevalence and age distribution of cannabis use in Canada, a public health approach to cannabis use is overdue," said Benedikt Fischer, who led a peer-reviewed study to develop the protocols.
More than one in ten Canadian adults and about one in three young people aged 16-25 reported using cannabis during the past year, according to the research.
Despite the prevalence and health risks associated with cannabis use, the study points out that Canada has not yet taken a public health approach to address its harms, as it has with alcohol, tobacco, and even injection drug use.
"Misinformation about cannabis can be dangerous," Fischer said.
For example, surveys show that many young cannabis users believe that it is safe to drive after smoking marijuana when in fact data shows it has led to a number of traffic fatalities.
"This resembles the situation forty years ago, when the majority of Canadians still believed it was safe to drink and drive," Fischer said.
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They recommend abstinence from cannabis use during pregnancy, for example, and that anyone using cannabis should not drive for three to four hours after consumption.
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Fischer is a scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Public Health Agency of Canada chair in applied public health at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.
The study is to be published in the upcoming September/October issue of the Canadian Journal of Public Health.
Source-AFP