New study proposes public health guidelines to reduce the harms from cannabis use
The most reliable way to avoid cannabis-related harms is to abstain from use
TORONTO—A new research study conducted by an international team of experts recommends a public health approach to cannabis—including
evidence-based guidelines for lower-risk use—to reduce the health harms that result from the use of cannabis. Led by Dr.
Benedikt Fischer, CAMH scientist and CIHR/PHAC* Chair in Applied Public Health (Simon Fraser University, Vancouver), the study
is being published in the September/October 2011 issue of the Canadian Journal of Public Health (CJPH).
More than one in ten Canadian adults, and about one in three young people aged 16–25, report using cannabis during the past
year. 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 we have with alcohol, tobacco, and even injection drug use.
“A broad-based public health approach to cannabis use would include a prevention strategy for young people, risk reduction
strategies for at-risk users, and better access to treatment for problem users,” explains Dr. Fischer. His latest study addresses
the risk reduction component, based on a comprehensive review of existent scientific data identifying the preeminent cannabis
use patterns and practices leading to key health risks and harms. Based on this evidence, the study offers guidelines on how
to modify these practices and patterns at the user-level as a public health–oriented policy tool to reduce harm.
“Misinformation about cannabis can be dangerous,” Dr. Fischer explains. For example, surveys show that many young cannabis
users believe that it is safe to drive after using cannabis, whereas recent research in Canada shows that a significant number
of traffic fatalities in young adults are attributable to cannabis use. “This resembles the situation forty years ago, when
the majority of Canadians still believed it was safe to drink and drive,” says Dr. Fischer.
“Cannabis is not a benign drug,” Dr. Fischer continues. “The evidence linking patterns of use and problems is strong. We can
use this evidence to provide straightforward, factual information to cannabis users and their families, friends, or peers,
on how to reduce the risks for problems, and to create screening tools for health professionals to help address the risks.”
Some of the harmful practices and patterns of use documented in the study include:
- Cannabis use at a young age – Longitudinal studies suggest that using cannabis from a young age can be associated with a number of problems, including
mental illness and dependence. While most cannabis users will not progress to other illicit substance use, those who use cannabis
from a young age are far more likely to make this transition.
- Frequent use – Using cannabis often, usually defined as daily or near-daily use, has been linked to a variety of health problems including
cognitive and memory performance, or risk for dependence.
- Cannabis use before driving – Recent data suggests that approximately five per cent of Canadian adult drivers report driving after cannabis use in the
past year, and high school student surveys show that more students drive after cannabis use than after drinking alcohol. It
is recommended that anyone using cannabis should not drive for three to four hours after consumption.
- Cannabis use during pregnancy – While the possible consequences of cannabis use during pregnancy have not been reliably distinguished from the potentially
confounding impact of alcohol and tobacco use, there is sufficient scientific basis to recommend abstinence from cannabis
use during pregnancy.
“A key message is that the most reliable way to avoid cannabis-related harms is to abstain from use,” says Dr. Fischer. “Those
who do use cannabis need to be advised about patterns of use to avoid problems in the short and long run. Our guidelines are
meant to target the most dangerous patterns of use among those citizens who use cannabis, and therefore reduce the possible
health problem consequences of such use.”
Using scientific evidence to provide guidelines on practices or patterns of use that substantially reduce the risks of acute
and long-term harms is analogous to the “Low Risk Drinking Guidelines” for alcohol, which were first introduced in the 1990s.
“Given the prevalence and age distribution of cannabis use in Canada, a public health approach to cannabis use—including prevention
strategies for young people, risk reduction, and access to treatment—is overdue,” according to Dr. Fischer.
The Canadian Public Health Association endorses the Lower Risk Cannabis Use Guidelines. “The next step is for health and education
authorities and the wider community to begin discussion of the evidence-based guidelines, and how this information could best
be conveyed to key target groups in the context of a broad-based public health approach,” Dr. Fischer says.
*“CIHR/PHAC” refers to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research/Public Health Agency of Canada
Media contact: Sara Goldvine, CAMH Public Affairs, 416-535-8501x4951
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The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) is Canada’s largest mental health and addiction teaching hospital, as well
as one of the world’s leading research centres in the area of addiction and mental health. CAMH combines clinical care, research,
education, policy development, prevention and health promotion to transform the lives of people affected by mental health
and addiction issues.
CAMH is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto, and is a Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization
Collaborating Centre.