Preventive Medicine Reports (Dec 2020)

The Lower-Risk Cannabis Use Guidelines’ (LRCUG) recommendations: How are Canadian cannabis users complying?

  • Chae-Rim Lee,
  • Angelica Lee,
  • Samantha Goodman,
  • David Hammond,
  • Benedikt Fischer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20
p. 101187

Abstract

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Canada, alongside other jurisdictions, implemented non-medical cannabis legalization in 2018, partly towards improving public health. Evidence-based ‘Lower-Risk Cannabis Use Guidelines’ (LRCUG), including recommendations for cannabis users on how to decrease risk-behaviors for harms, have been developed and widely disseminated in Canada since 2017. However, knowledge on users’ compliance with the LRCUG is limited. We identified four major Canadian (three national, one provincial) population surveys presenting key data on cannabis-related behaviors: the National Cannabis Survey, Canadian Cannabis Survey, Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol & Drugs Survey, and CAMH Monitor. We scanned each survey for indicator data mapping onto either of the LRCUG’s recommendations for the years 2017 to 2019. Relevant indicator data, albeit with varying operationalizations, were found for six of the ten LRCUG’s recommendation clusters in at least some of the surveys, and were extracted and summarized. For results, substantial -- but declining -- majorities of users consumed cannabis by smoking, yet with shifts towards other use modes. Between one- to two-in-five users engaged in the risk-behaviors of using high-potency cannabis products, frequent cannabis use and cannabis-impaired driving, respectively. A small proportion of pregnant or breastfeeding women continued cannabis use during the study period. The data identified found suggested a heterogeneous picture regarding cannabis users’ compliance with the LRCUG’s recommendations. Non-compliance is highest for recommendations regarding modes-of-use, and applies to minorities of users for other risks factors. These sub-groups are at elevated risk for acute (e.g., accidents) or long-term (e.g., dependence) cannabis-related harms contributing to the public health burden. Appropriate targeted interventions in these areas require improvement.

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