Since Canada’s legalization of cannabis five years ago, researchers say the policy has had mixed results in terms of public health and justice reform.

  • @[email protected]
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    581 year ago

    So the biggest negative about the legalization of cannabis is an increase in hospital admissions due to inadvertent edible use. And more children-young adults admitting they consumed cannabis. Though i wonder if relaxed views on its use prompted more under aged people to truthfully admit to its use then an actual increase in use.

    There is need for adults to better monitor their drugs but other then that it seems to be a massive success.

      • @[email protected]
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        231 year ago

        https://tc.canada.ca/en/road-transportation/statistics-data/canadian-motor-vehicle-traffic-collision-statistics-2021

        It’s a very specific measure in the data you published, and the capacity to get a statistically unbiased measure pre-legalization would be difficult due to availability and protocol around THC testing.

        Although I WHOLEHEARTEDLY agree that it’s something that needs to be very carefully studied and monitored and legislated around… The answer to the question “are the roads more or less safe before or after legalization?” Is “They are equally safe within statistical margins”

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          “They are equally safe within statistical margins”

          From the context of road safely, this would mean that the roads are not safe, since we still have an overwhelming number of accidents, injuries, and fatalities. But I digress.

          To the point of cannabis-related DUI, the link above suggests that impaired driving as a factor to accidents went down 7.7%, while the stats breaking down DUI (the link I posted) still suggests that cannabis-related DUI has gone up by quite a bit.

          Would DUI numbers be even lower had cannabis not been legalized? Your guess is as good as mine.

          A few rather annoying complications to gathering these stats over the last five years, however, involve COVID and underreporting.

          For instance, did officers test people less often because of the risk of close contact during the 2020-2021 pandemic? We know that there were fewer drivers on the road, too, so the numbers can’t really be used as a reliable marker one way or the other. Fewer drivers = fewer accidents (but fewer accidents doesn’t mean fewer impaired drivers.

          For Toronto at least, more people were caught driving under the influence year-over-year during the same time period.

          We also know that DUI charges weren’t even being pursued due to backlogs.

          To me, it seems that there may have been far more people driving under the influence than the stats lead us to believe.

          The study I linked also suggests that many samples are obtained quite a while after an accident. So the actual level of drugs in someone’s system is also being reported much lower than it would have been at the time of the accident. Couple this with the above point, and things looked much safer than they actually were.

          • @[email protected]
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            101 year ago

            We can control for less people on the road by looking at stats per-million km driven. And again, we’re not seeing any meaningful movement.

            And to the points around “maybe the true cases of people above the limit were EVEN HIGHER due to fear of testing around Covid” or “Maybe the actual THC content was EVEN HIGHER because of the time delay” they both actually drive to the same point:

            If we’re seeing way more people with THC in their system maybe more than we even know, and at levels of concentration higher than we can even test… Then why aren’t we seeing significant increases in accidents or fatalities per million kms? We CLEARLY see these patterns w/ alcohol. Why not THC? Why the disconnect?

            If anything, your arguments only make me think that THC levels that we’re seeing are safer than previously understood w.r.t operating a motor vehicle.

            Keep in mind, I’m not suggesting relaxing them. I’m just pointing out that the “skyrocketing” THC DUIs aren’t materializing.

            Or at least I’m not seeing them in the data in front of me

            Also, full disclosure, I am not a smart man

            If I’m missing a link or misreading something somewhere, let me know. I’m not married to my evaluation. I’m just trying to come to the same conclusion about safety as you and can’t seem to independently get there.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              You’re asking good questions, and perhaps in time (and with more data), we can better account for what’s going on.

              One thing to always keep in mind when you look at traffic incident stats is that certain things change over time.

              For example, additional measures to make roads safer, better technology in vehicles, more effective emergency medicine, and new laws are constantly been put in place to reduce accidents (and fatalities).

              Why do I mention this? Because we could very well have more DUI drivers on the road who may have THC levels high enough to be legitimately impaired, but these other factors are balancing out the risk of those impairments.

              This could explain why we’re catching more DUI drivers, but seeing fewer DUI crashes or fatalities.

              • Concetta
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                41 year ago

                Or the simplest answer, thc doesn’t impair your motor skills or judgement to nearly the same level alcohol does.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  Surely that depends on the dosage. I don’t know how drunk/stoned people are when they decide they are sober enough to drive. It is possible that alcohol makes that self-assessment particularly poor, but I haven’t seen any data yet. I’d love to learn more.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Yup, just imagine the gall it’d take to look at the US prison system full of drug arrests and think, “Well, it’s working alright for them.”

      I am so elated that a safe hallucinagen is no longer restricted and causing social woes.

  • Cyborganism
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    231 year ago

    Well for one I now have access to cannabis oil that helps me relieve anxiety and sleep as lot better. So personally it’s great.

    Where it’s not so great is where governments have been too restrictive and people had to circumvent these restrictions. For things like growing it at home or edibles in Quebec for example.

    • oʍʇǝuoǝnu
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      81 year ago

      My partner gets 20 mg gummie from the black market that work amazing for her for sleep. 100 gummie for $100. Can’t get gummie for that price, or with that dosage from the gov’t, so she’ll never buy from them.

      I understand the issues with edibles and kids, but the gov’t isn’t going to win this so they may as well figure out how to move forward if they want to make an actual dent in the black market.

      • Cyborganism
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        31 year ago

        Just make the packaging look like it’s medication with a big scary warning sign on it. And make the gummies a boring color. It’s as simple as that.

        And if the dosage is too high, simply reduce it by half. Let people take two if they need to.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          The take two thought peocess is probably what caused some of the mess.

          Oh, well just keep it low so there’s less risk to kids, but now we gotta eat a whole damn chocolate bar if we want it in chocolate bar form.

          If we can’t get the dosage we want in the size and form factor we want, people will just keep getting it on the black market rather than gorge themselves unnecessarily

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            I’m way outside of the loop on this as I don’t use cannabis in any form, but if I get what people are saying the dose on the edibles means that you wouldn’t eat a typical serving of candy to feel the effects?

            That sounds both stupid and dangerous to me. I’d think some of the reason you’d eat the candy is for the texture and flavour, so why wouldn’t they be dosed in a way that they expect you to eat the whole bag as a snack?

            I can’t imagine buying a bag of sour patch kids and being told I can only eat three of the candies out of it.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              If you want to eat a whole chocolate bar to get high, you can go ahead and buy a dosed bar appropriately, but a lot of people don’t want to do that. And 1 bar might not even be enough as people have different tolerances.

              On the black market, things can be dosed so you can maybe do it in 2-3 squares of a 16 square chocolate bar. You can get high, but also don’t need to eat an unhealthy amount of sugar. We don’t want to be encouraging a chocolate bar a day for some people.

                • @[email protected]
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                  1 year ago

                  Oh there’s one other interesting point which I believe can be an issue sometimes.

                  When you dose a bag of gummies at 10mg, I’m not sure where things stand on the dose of each gummy vs the bag. I think I’ve heard stories of unpredictable doses if not the whole serving. That would be the same risk for high or low dose as well.

                  But when you get into something like a brownie or cookie, which is sold as a single item you would intend to eat all at once, you don’t have that issue. But they can’t make a single cookie or brownie with a high enough dose.

                  I’m not actually sure how much of a problem that is in reality, but it’s a minor consideration if doses are broken up.

  • @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    This doesn’t sound like mixed results. Get rid of the kid friendly packaging and you’ll lower the overdoses with kids. I’d like to see if alcohol consumption changed during this period.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          In my province they’re sold in generic child proof ziplocks. Black market ones totally look like regular candy though.

        • Concetta
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          1 year ago

          Oh come on, I shouldn’t have to eat an edible that doesn’t look like a pile of mush. People should be more responsible with storage and teach their kids better.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    We have a hard time hiring workers because we have a zero drug policy and nobody can pass a piss test.

    • I once applied to a job that tested for alcohol and nicotine and I thought that was pretty nuts.like they only hire straight edge people? They must be hurting for employees often.

  • @[email protected]
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    -61 year ago

    I will never spend a cent of tax on cannabis. After 25 years of being demonized, demeaned, criminalized and prosecuted, now suddenly all the same assholes who pushed that agenda are invested in cannabis companies? Fuck that shit. Black market was good enough before and it’s even better after legalization.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Fuck everyone who needs it to be legal right? Progress is bad if it negatively affects me in any way shape or form!

  • @[email protected]
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    -81 year ago

    Cannabis legalization in Canada appears not to have been the public health disaster anticipated by some of its opponents…

    I can only say this as someone who is outdoors and in my community quite often: cannabis legalization has created so many situations where I’m now breathing second hand smoke or have to smell the gut-turning skunk stink that is weed.

    It’s made otherwise pleasant outdoor experiences into negative ones.

    • Walking on an outdoor trail? Weed.
    • Biking outdoors on local paths? Weed.
    • In my own backyard? Weed, with the sounds of my neighbours retching as they smoke… how pleasant.
    • In my own home with the windows open? Weed.
    • On downtown sidewalks? Weed.

    I can’t escape it. It’s far worse than what I experience with smokers.

    Not to mention that, observationally, the numerous local cannabis shops are attracting “characters” that have made these areas appear visibly worse than before legalization.

    But like I said, that’s just my experience of how it’s negatively impacted my life and community. Maybe it’s benefited other non-users in some way that I’m not aware about. If so, I’d be quite surprised.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I smell and hear cars everywhere I go. They literally kill me and my loved ones. No one is going to care about some pot smoke.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Out of curiosity, when you describe yr experience of being exposed to the scent of cannabis when outdoors, are we talking a persistent scent in these enviroments, a passing whiff, or somewhere in between?

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        somewhere in between

        Depends. Since legalization, between two neighbours I have who seem to smoke regularly, I had to keep the windows closed to our kitchen and bedrooms over the summer months. We’re talking about early morning to midnight. Working on my bike in my own backyard is a challenge because of that.

        On walks/rides, this can happen in passing at least a few times per outing. At parks, sometimes, someone will be there smoking weed while they watch their kid, which means I can’t take my grandkids to the park at that moment.

        For me, it’s not just a smell to be annoyed with. I get persistent headaches/migraines when exposed to cigarette or cannabis smoke, for hours. Effectively, it can ruin my day, and I’ve had to return from hikes on more than several occasions because of this.

        I’m not arguing against people’s choice to do drugs, but when it affects others around them, it’s problematic. It’s honestly disappointing that my original comment has been downvoted, considering this is something that I’d think any reasonable person would agree with. My experience has been profoundly negative.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          I can see that being frustrating for sure.

          Ngl, I’ve seen nothing but positives from legalization on a personal level, but I was curious to hear yr experience, as what you described in yr original comment reminded me of my dad’s complaint of second hand cannabis smoke when we were out in public, and he caught of whiff of it for less than 5 seconds, which seemed… extreme.

          Thanks for taking the time to answer.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            Its a problem, it hangs in the air and spreads really far. it isn’t like a cigarette where it wafts away quickly. we experienced the same as the other commentor. a local pond is lowlying and some dude chilling out is choking out everyone trying to enjoy a moment. Our balcony gets flooded with the stank from the lower floor unit, or blows directly into our place while eating dinner. We’ve seen a group hanging out on a path and parents having to walk their kids through a huge cloud. It just sucks that everyone that wants to avoid that smell or smoke now has every park, beach, trail, sidewalk stinking and smokey. as my username suggests I’m in BC and it has always neen tolerated here, but at least before people went to remote places or did it inside, now it seems people just don’t have common courtesy simce it waa decriminalized

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          From both sides when it bugs ya is a pain for sure. Not even weed, if I had 2 chain smokers as my neighbors I’d be very annoyed.

          Obviously it’d be better for you if they were smoking less or were somehow able to direct it away from your place, but maybe a couple small / medium hepa filters will at least ease your discomfort instead of having to keep windows closed when you maybe want them open?

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            It would be nice if they just smoked in their home, but I’m not the type to be militant about what people do on their property.

            I’ve learned to just deal with not having those windows open, even though I’d love to have them open more often.

            The challenges when others smoke outdoors (both cigarettes and weed) in public places is probably more of an issue. Since I try to get outdoors to improve my health (physically and mentally), so not being able to as much as I’d like has a negative effect in the short and long-term.

            Like I said, as soon as it starts to impact other people, it’s a problem.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      We have the same where I live. it sucks, and ruins a lot of nice nature moments. I had throat cancer before ( not from smoking) so with radiation treatment now any smoke brings me into a coughing episode, as does smell of a badly tuned diesel, or vinegar…but vinegar isn’t something people typically waft about. Nothing worse than trying to enjoy dinner and a neighbour is puffing away and it blows into your own place.

    • Tigbitties
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      41 year ago

      local cannabis shops are attracting “characters”

      I’m very curious where you live. The only people that are buying weed from the SQDC here in Montreal are soccer moms and grandparents.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I’m very curious where you live.

        Durham Region.

        Since these places have opened up, I’ve seen a marked increase of loitering in these areas, people that absolutely don’t look like soccer moms, and a general bad vibe. It’s bad enough around our beer stores and LCBOs, but there seems to be far more cannabis shops than alcohol stores these days.

        The effect of crime near cannabis shops after legalization in various US states/cities has shown an increase in some, and none in others. Perhaps my area is one of the unlucky ones.