Journal of substance abuse treatment | 2021

Legalization of cannabis use in Canada: Impacts on the cannabis use profiles of youth seeking services for substance use.

 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nCannabis is a highly used substance among youth, but has the potential to negatively impact the developing brain. Recreational cannabis use was legalized in Canada in October 2018. This exploratory study examines cannabis use profiles of high-risk youth before and after the national legalization of recreational cannabis use.\n\n\nMETHOD\nThis cross-sectional cohort study examines the cannabis use profiles of two cohorts of youth, one recruited prior to legalization (N\xa0=\xa0101) and one recruited after legalization (N\xa0=\xa0168).\n\n\nRESULTS\nThis study found few changes in cannabis use patterns after legalization. The rate of high-frequency cannabis use, polysubstance use, social circles of use, and mental health and substance use challenges showed no change, and the study found no associations with age. Exceptions were that youth were more likely to report purchasing cannabis from a legal source after legalization. Concealment of cannabis use from legal authorities declined after legalization among youth over the age of majority (19+ years), but not among younger youth (<19\xa0years).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nMinimal changes have occurred in the cannabis use patterns of service-seeking youth in the short term following legalization. This holds true both for youth who have reached the age of majority and those who have not. Nevertheless, this population has overlapping substantial mental health and substance use challenges. Integrated services should address cannabis use and other concurrent challenges and be sensitive to the postlegalization social climate.

Volume 126
Pages \n 108340\n
DOI 10.1016/J.JSAT.2021.108340
Language English
Journal Journal of substance abuse treatment

Full Text