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5 Questions About Traveling With Marijuana Answered

No matter where you’re going and how you’re getting there, traveling with marijuana is a challenge.

If you’re a marijuana consumer, going on trips usually always prompts the question: Where am I going to find marijuana once I’ve arrived at my destination? While some rely on friends to point them in the right direction, you still need to know the state’s stance on legal weed.

Traveling with your own cannabis should be the logical choice, but it’s not. Despite the progress cannabis has made in the past few years, traveling with the drug, whether it’s medicinal, recreational or you’re traveling by plane or train, remains a bleak process, one that could easily put you in jail or in an awkward legal situation.

Here are 5 questions you may have about traveling with weed:

What’s the deal with airports?

Even without adding marijuana in the mix, airports are complicated places where you should be on your guard. If an agent finds marijuana, they’ll likely report it to the police and you’ll find yourself navigating the state’s regulations on marijuana, which can be very strict depending on where you are. It’s not advisable having any marijuana on you while in an airport.

What’s the TSA’s stance on marijuana?

what tsa would do if you got caught with marijuana
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RELATED: What TSA Would Do If You Got Caught With Marijuana

According to an April 2019 TSA Instagram post, agents are looking for possible threats and are not interested in drugs. Still, if officials find drugs on you, they’re forced to take them and report them to the police.

What about CBD?

Despite the fact that CBD is legal on a federal level and that the TSA says CBD oil is allowed in carry-on and checked out luggage, you should still ensure that your product contains less than 0.3% of THC. The fact that many CBD products are not FDA approved means that there’s a lot that depends on the officer who’s handling your case.

What if you have a medical marijuana card?

more delays in farce that is international cannabis rescheduling
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RELATED: TSA (Sort of) Allows (Some) Hemp-CBD Products on Flights

While it’s always important to have your documents on you, including medical marijuana card and a letter or prescription from your doctor, you should still be careful when having marijuana on you. Medical marijuana cards are not valid in states where the drug is illegal and, even if you’re in a legal state, TSA agents have no way of checking the validity of these cards. Again, it all depends on the officer on duty, and it remains a big risk to have drugs on you in an airport.

What if you’re driving or traveling by train?

When driving, it’s important to be discreet and to know the laws of the states you’re passing by. Check the amount that won’t get you in trouble and keep all drugs and alcohol in the trunk of your car. Carry all of your documents with you and never travel with medical marijuana in states where the drug remains illegal.

When traveling by train, most services prohibit all drugs and alcohol, whether they’re located in checked bags or on you. Still, read up on the different policies of these businesses since they tend to have small differences.

Dreaming About Better Heart Health? Here’s What Research Suggests

A team of researchers found a surprising connection between poor sleep scores and higher food weight and sugar consumption. 

A recent study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association (JAHA) illuminated the importance of a good night’s sleep for women and future research on the link between sleep’s impact on heart health.

The study’s authors showcased, “Poor sleep quality was associated with greater food intake and lower‐quality diet, which can increase cardiovascular disease risk.”

Four hundred and ninety-five women participated in the study, varying in ages from 20 to 76-years-old. Researchers used the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) which measures quality of sleep in older adults and the Insomnia Severity Index, a multiple-question guide to the effect of insomnia to look at sleep patterns in study participants. Marrying sleep data with each participant’s quality of diet, the team found a surprising connection between poor sleep scores and higher weight and sugar consumption. 

Legal Marijuana Saves 50000 lives a year study shows
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CBD and sleep: Is there a connection? 

Long studied for its effects on sleep quality and anxiety, a January 2019 study published in The Permanente Journal focused on the calming effect of CBD on the mind and body, without an issue of safety. The study’s authors cited, “CBD displays promise as a tool for reducing anxiety in clinical populations, but given the open-label and nonrandomized nature of this large case series.” 

RELATED: Demystifying Marijuana And Heart Health

Often better tolerated than other medicines for anxiety or depression, the researchers’ findings, “supported existing scientific evidence,” that CBD can have a positive effect on sleep and anxiety, possibly paving a path to reducing insomnia and depression tied to poor lack of sleep. 

The American Sleep Association touts CBD’s benefits for sleep as well. “Overall, there is scientific research that supports the theory that there are CBD health benefits. While more research needs to be done, the use of CBD can potentially decrease your symptoms of insomnia and help you get more quality sleep.” 

Americans as a whole are starting to add CBD oil to their nightly regimens. An August 2019 Gallup poll found that of the 14% of Americans that use CBD oil, 11% claim it’s to help with sleep-related issues.  With the cannabidiol market expected to rise to 17.3 million dollars by 2026, analysts are betting that American’s are seeking a solution to better sleep and lower anxiety.

RELATED: How Does Marijuana Affect My Sleep And Dreams?

A, “trillion-dollar healthcare problem,” lack of sleep is affecting the United States economy in surprising ways. From a lack of productivity, related health issues and mental health challenges, sleep not only matters to an individual’s health, but society as a whole.

Law Enforcement Is Trying To Be Cannabis Cool

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How is a cop supposed to tell the difference between a consumer using a legal product, and an illegal consumer using or transporting a product from the illicit market?

Law enforcement wants to take marijuana-intoxicated drivers off the road. But roadside testing devices are still unavailable. They want to help stop the illicit cannabis market. But one person’s ounce of weed looks like another’s. Law enforcement is trying to be cannabis cool, but it is tough.

They have their drug dogs at the ready. But drug dogs hit on hemp and marijuana, legal or not, and are being phased out or overruled.

For example, in a May 24, 2019 weekly roundup report by the Washington state Association of Prosecuting Attorneys, the Colorado Supreme Court reversed a conviction of a man in a case where a drug dog was used without the officer having probable cause that the man was in possession of a drug in violation of state law

Some states say that even the smell of marijuana can’t be used as a reason to pull someone over and search the car, or to search a person in the car after smelling marijuana, as in the 2018 case of a Maryland man. Washington D.C. police are advised that “simply smelling the odor of marijuana does not present a reasonable, articulable suspicion.”

For over 50 years, since the establishment of the Drug Enforcement Administration and the creation of the Controlled Substances Act, marijuana has been used as a prime offense to nail thousands and thousands of people, usually after a “probable cause” observation by the officer—a broken taillight, for example, that gives the officer a reason to approach a driver. The marijuana offense then becomes the cause for the arrest.

RELATED: Hemp: Marijuana Or Not Marijuana?

“I gotta tell you I think the police are confused,” former police commissioner of the Boston Police Department, Ed Davis said during a panel at the 2020 National Cannabis Industry Association conference in Boston recently. Davis was the police commissioner during the Boston Marathon bombing. Massachusetts voted to legalize recreational cannabis in 2016. “They very much want to do what the community wants them to do, and those people have spoken. Police need to pay attention to this new product, and think beyond arrests, and work with regulators to come up with strategies, and move forward in a positive manner.”

Never Admit To Police That You’ve Been Smoking Marijuana
Photo by Chalabala/Getty Images

Davis was in the narcotics division in Boston for ten years. “We didn’t care about marijuana. All of our efforts were directed to cocaine and heroin. In the course of that work, sometimes we would trip across a marijuana distributor. Marijuana cases were incidental to other cases.

RELATED: Police Field Tests Can’t Distinguish Between Hemp And Marijuana

“The cops are doing what the legislators tell them to do. I never heard a cop who came in to work and said I am going to go out there and get me some marijuana users. I see more marijuana arrests for contempt of cop, for example, where if someone is mouthing off to me, and I find some marijuana on them, I can hook them up and bring them in.”

Asked by The Fresh Toast how a cop on the street is supposed to tell the difference between a legal consumer using a legal product and an illegal user using or transporting a product from the illicit market, Davis said that it would be in the same way police would know a licensed cab driver from an unlicensed one. “We can do that by working with the health department regulations for example. We work very well with regulatory agencies. That way we can make sure that who we are dealing with is licensed or not licensed.”

At What Point Does Online Snooping Become A Problem

It’s common to look up romantic crushes online and pay attention to their activity. Still, it’s very easy to take things too far.

The urge to go through someone’s virtual life is strong, even with friends and acquaintances. When you’re romantically interested in someone, it’s almost impossible not to succumb to your curiosity and scroll to the depths of their Instragram profile, doing your best to avoid liking a photo that was uploaded over four years ago.

There’s nothing wrong with the occasional online snoop, which can even become a fun activity done with friends and a few drinks. Most of the time though, online stalking sessions are done in private and they tend to augment our insecurities, whether we’re dating that person or are simply curious about their lives.

While a significant number of people do it, at what point does online snooping become a problem?  Here is some advice to help you decide when to back off.

Do: for fun

Social media was developed to bring us closer to people from all corners of the world. This is amazing, since it introduces different perspectives, cultures and opinions that differ from yours and that you’d never encounter in your day to day life. There’s nothing wrong with following and going through a stranger’s Twitter or Instagram profile as long as it’s entertaining and doesn’t make you unhappy.

Don’t: when in a relationship

At What Point Does Online Snooping Become A Problem

Relationships are complex enough as-is. Add technology and it’s even worse, with people using these tools to track their partners, check their online interactions and more. While you may feel the urge to go through the people who like your boyfriend or girlfriend’s Instagram post, keeping track of their online activity is a slippery slope. Comments and likes can mean a hundred different things, and it’s extremely exhausting to try and decipher.

RELATED: 9 Social Media Hacks That Will Improve Your Feeds And Simplify Your Life

“One person who preferred to be anonymous admitted they check to see if the person they’re dating still likes his ex’s Instagram posts, and vice versa,” writes Mashable. Does that sound fun? No, it doesn’t.

Do: when you’re really into someone

So you just came home from a great date and want to continue to bask in the glow of this person, looking at their photos and hobbies and all that good stuff. Go ahead, there’s nothing wrong with enjoying yourself as long as you remember that social media is not all there is.

Don’t: Instagram stalk your ex

5 Instagram Accounts To Follow After A Break Up
Photo by Katka Pavlickova via Unsplash

RELATED: 5 Health Benefits Of Taking A Social Media Break

We’ve all been there. It’s unrealistic to say that you won’t ever do this, but it’s important to keep track of your behaviors. If you feel yourself becoming depressed for extended periods of time and being unable to engage with your phone if it’s not to check up on whatever it is that your ex is doing, cut yourself off from them. It may sound extreme, but the blocking option is there for everyone to use. While you may feel embarrassed to block your ex with whom you ended things amicably, your mental health comes first.

Do: before a first Tinder date

You may feel nervous before you go on a date with a stranger, so it’s okay to look them up and see if they look normal. It might even be advisable just as long as you don’t go overboard and freak them out by telling them about that cute photo of their dog you’ve never met.

Mystical Experiences Without Psychedelics? Try This

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A new study found virtual reality programs can replicate mystical-type experiences commonly associated with psychedelics.

Instead of dropping acid, what about dropping into virtual reality? A growing movement of researchers and artists have explored whether VR simulations can replicate the mystical type experiences psychedelics users often report.

A new study published through Cornell University found that participants who went through a VR program developed by scientists had life-altering changes “comparable to those reported in double-blind clinical studies after high doses of psilocybin and LSD.”

An international group of computer programmers, VR specialists, and medical researchers created a program they called “Isness.” The term appears in various spiritual and moral teachings, but Quartz loosely explains the concept as acting with no moral imperative or sense of obligation. Others just define isness as “wasting time.” The Isness program in the study, however, is a “multi-person VR journey where participants experience the collective emergence, fluctuation, and dissipation of their bodies as energetic essences,” researchers wrote.

The study included 57 participants who ran through Isness. In the multi-sensory program, users wore custom-made “mudra gloves.” The gloves would generate light when a person would form the “mudra pose,” achieved by bringing the top of your thumb into the tip of your forefinger or middle finger. Light would also appear when participants interacted with one another, as visuals and audio responded to their movements in real time.

RELATED:  Psychedelics Help You Become Emotionally Adaptable, Study Finds

Afterwards, these participants were asked to answer a survey usually given in psychedelic-focused research. It’s called the Mystical Experience questionnaire, or MEQ30. The study didn’t feature a control group, so instead researchers compared the results to 26 other studies that used the MEQ30 questionnaire.

Virtual Reality Replicates Mystical Psychedelic Experiences, Study Finds
Photo by jeshoots.com

Answers given by those undergoing the Isness experience were either “indistinguishable” or “more intense” than those previous studies. Only three other studies were rated as “more intense” than Isness — two where participants were given 30mg of psilocybin mushrooms and 5MeO-DMT, which naturally occurs in the Sonora Desert toad.

“Within a supportive setting and conceptual framework, we have presented evidence suggesting that it is possible to design phenomenological experiences using multi-person VR which create the conditions for mystical-type experiences from which participants derive insight and meaning,” researchers concluded.

RELATED: Scientists Confirm Taking Psychedelics At Music Festivals Makes You Happier

Whether this program might one day replace psychedelic experiences remains to be seen. But researchers found that many participants experienced the ego death, or ego dissolution, common when users take psychedelics. In addition, there those who reported a deeper connection within themselves and the universe around them.

Researchers wrote that, “In a supportive therapeutic context…technologies like Isness may offer an opportunity for a digital culture which is addicted to unhealthy economic growth narratives to meditate on its own mortality.”

5 Cheap Ways To Practice Self-Care

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Taking care of your mental and physical health shouldn’t have to deplete you of your life savings.

Self-care is a term that can include many things, from taking a trip to spending more time caring for your skin. While all of these activities are necessary, we tend to associate the word ‘self-care’ with trends that cost money. Thanks, Instagram influencers!

It’s important to remember that there are plenty of things you can do every day to work on your personal health that don’t cost a thing. Everything on this list will provide just as much self-care than that $50 spin class or $100 stem cell facial, not to say these can’t be great once in a while.

Spend time outside

Set out a personal goal of spending more time outside on a weekly basis, especially if your day to day routine is mostly made up of going to work and then coming back home. Try to create some space for you that allows you to walk outside and to have some fresh air, even if this time is spent taking a short walk around the block.

Clean up your space

5 Cheap Ways To Practice Self-Care
Photo by Norbert Levajsics via Unsplash

RELATED: 4 Commuter-Friendly Exercises For Your Mind And Body

Whenever you’re feeling stressed, there’s a good chance your apartment is also feeling stressed. Symptoms often appear as more clothes and dirty dishes lying around than usual, or a bathroom that hasn’t been cleaned in weeks. If you have a big task or something that is making you anxious, try to take your mind off of the problem by cleaning up your surroundings. You can start out small and you’ll soon realize that the lack of mess around you can have a positive influence on your mental state.

Try to move more

There’s no need to pay for an expensive gym membership or class in order to move more; you can workout using a YouTube video or by simply making the time to walk or jog for a period of 30 minutes a few times a week.

Cut back on social media

study finds connection between emoji use and sex
Photo by Minty via rawpixel.com

RELATED: Just Started Working Out? 3 Reasons Why You Might Be Gaining Weight

While the internet is great for all kinds of things, it also takes a toll on our mental health, specifically social media. This makes it hard to focus on work and daily tasks, but also fun stuff, such as watching TV or having a conversation.

Try committing to other activities without checking your phone. This will allow you to be more present with friends and family and to also do other things aside from checking your social media feed. You’ll be surprised by the amount of books, shows, movies and personal projects you’ll have time to spend on if you cut back on your smartphone usage by an inch.

Don’t skimp on sleep

While it’s tempting to bing an entire season of our favorite show, even though it’s way past our bed time. it’s important to put sleep (almost) above all else to make sure you clock in your 8 hours every night. If you have trouble sleeping, it’s even more important to create a routine that’ll help you be more productive the following morning, like avoiding foods after a certain time and monitoring the blue light emanating from your devices.

Ladies, Here’s Why Your Yearly Gynecological Exam Is So Important

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Self-care means looking at your whole body and working with your care team to ensure the next year of your life is your best yet.

There’s a magical time between Christmas and the first glimpses of spring where time seems to flow endlessly, yet the minutes are few. With the rush of the holiday season over, it’s the perfect time to prioritize self-care in its most important form: the annual gynecological appointment. 

While many women dread and often put-off the yearly discussion, doctors are encouraging women to keep their annual exams because it’s directly tied to better health and wellness outcomes. 

An annual exam is a really unique opportunity for a discussion about diet, exercise regimen, alcohol and drug consumption,  vaccination, and what may be ahead in the future with a proactive (instead of reactive) lens.” – Dr. Sharyn Lewin

 

If you’re imagining stirrups and stern talks, Dr. Sharyn Lewin, a gynecologic oncologist and President of the Lewin Fund, wants you to think of your annual visit in a new light. “As women, we are more likely to prioritize the hairstylist, nail technician and esthetician over our annual exam,” Dr. Lewin remarked to The Fresh Toast. “Self-care means looking at your whole body and working with your care team to ensure the next year of your life is your best yet.” 

When having a conversation with your gynecologist, Dr. Lewin suggests remembering to discuss these three key elements with your care team: 

1.) Diet and Exercise: With obesity now being tied to thirteen different types of cancers, Dr. Lewin believes that a healthy weight and diet is more important than ever. “A plant-based diet full of leafy green vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, and lean meats will offer you a great defense against cancer,” Lewin states. 

women
Photo by Priscilla Du Preez via Unsplash

2.) Lifestyle: Dr. Lewin states to be your healthiest, limit smoking, alcohol, make sure vaccines are up-to-date, and practice good hand-washing to eliminate viruses and bacteria that can cause illness.

3.) Upcoming Tests: Most low-risk women start mammograms at the age of 40, colonoscopies should begin at 45 and pap smears in most cases are every three years. These screening tests are 

Dr. Lewin believes that women should recognize the importance of sitting down and discussing lifestyle choices that can affect an individual’s risk for cancer. After all, by recognizing internal health feeds outward appearance, Lewin explains that viruses react to a myriad of lifestyle choices including obesity, stress, and overall health. The best self-care is often simple: a great night’s sleep, a healthy diet, staying up-to-date on vaccines, and taking two minutes to meditate while you wash your hands thoroughly to prevent illness.

Why Is Marijuana Always Mentioned In Meth And Opioid Busts?

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Marijuana is just now starting to find its footing as a legitimate substance in the United States, like alcohol and tobacco.

If you ask some cannabis consumers, marijuana is not a drug, per se, but rather, it is a healing plant used to treat a variety of health conditions from anxiety to cancer. There are even those who believe that people who use marijuana are not of the same class as those who get high on hard drugs — that the pot user of today is thriving, earns a salary of $75K-plus per year and so forth. Yet, all one has to do is scour the crime news on the Internet on any given day to see that drug dealers and users, alike, are being apprehended, almost daily, for pot possession in conjunction with meth, heroin and prescription opioids.

If marijuana really is just medicine used by upstanding citizens, then why is it that this plant always seems to be associated with the dregs of society?

Marijuana is just now starting to find its footing as a legitimate substance in the United States, like alcohol and tobacco. It is now legal in more than 30 states for medicinal use, while 11 states have opened the doors for it to be used recreationally by adults 21 and older. But make no mistake about it, the plant is still mostly illegal in the United States.

The government maintains that it is a Schedule I dangerous drug — the same as heroin — and because of this classification, many states have opted to keep prohibition in place. This means that while marijuana is available to adults in California, people are not so lucky in states like Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee. 

So it is still necessary for millions of Americans to continue purchasing cannabis from criminal organizations. It’s the reason that marijuana is often found on drug dealers, in addition to harder substances. 

RELATED: Who Is Really Getting Busted For Marijuana Possession?

If you didn’t know this already, marijuana is the most popular drug in the world. Seriously, a World Drug Report published last year by the United Nations found that 188 million people as young as 15-years-old are now using cannabis all over the world. It’s a number that has continued to climb over the years, increasing by 62% from 2011 to 2017. In the United States alone, 12% of the population is now using cannabis regularly, according to a January 2020 Gallup poll. And remember, the herb is still mostly banned in the United States. But no one seems to care.

So, why is pot so popular? 

texas police wont arrest low level cases against the governors wishes
Photo by welcomia/Getty Images

Presumably, this has something to do with more people learning that all of the government propaganda spread over the years, the reefer madness of yesteryear was just a load of crap. Studies have shown that cannabis is, in fact, safer than most other illicit substances, the addiction rates are super low and regular use doesn’t exactly give way to the same downtrodden, death and destruction as harder drugs. Research has even shown that weed is safer than America’s two favorite drugs, alcohol and tobacco. Some 66% of the population now supports legalizing marijuana in a manner similar to those two substances.  

But it is essential to understand that drug use is on the rise across the country. In 2013, it was estimated that 24.6 million Americans (roughly 10% of the population) had used an illegal drug within the past month. Some of that increase is due to the legalization of marijuana. And more than half of the illicit drug users are believed to have started with weed, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Other drug use was either stable, declining or on the rise. 

It is worth mentioning, however, that not all marijuana users are created equal. There’s always going to be casualties. Just the same as some people can drink in moderation while others habitually get into trouble because of alcohol, people are going to get jammed up over weed — legal or not. And while marijuana is not exactly a gateway drug — even the federal government admits that it’s not — it would be foolish to deny its place in the American drug culture.

RELATED: How People Are Still Getting Busted For Marijuana At Airports

Some folks smoke weed exclusively; others prefer to drink, while some enjoy drugs like cocaine, meth and heroin. And then, there is that special breed who will do any drug they can get their hands on at any given time. These are likely some of the people getting caught up in multi-substance drug busts across the country. 

Considering the popularity of marijuana, it is going to have just as much of a place in oppressed society as it will among the prosperous. We’ve seen it happen for years with alcohol. There are winos, and there are aficionados. The only difference is one doesn’t have to make a court appearance on Monday. 

Some of this could be remedied by allowing the herb to be taxed and regulated nationwide like alcohol and tobacco. It would at least alleviate some of the legal struggles for folks in trouble with the law for trying to buy it. After all, more than 600,000 people are still getting arrested for pot each year. 

Unfortunately, there isn’t much that legalization can do for those people who cannot manage their lives — with or without marijuana. It is important to remember that the mug shots of Americans busted in possession of pot in association with other drugs is not the norm. Many of these people are troubled, suffering from substance abuse disorders and could benefit from professional help.

Does Chris Pratt Smoke Weed

Chris Pratt is one of Hollywood’s biggest actors. Does he smoke weed?

Chris Pratt has sneakily become one of the most famous actors in Hollywood, making the jump from TV to Marvel blockbuster movies. You can expect even more from him over the next two years, including the conclusion of the “Jurassic World” trilogy and the continuation of the “Guardians of the Galaxy” movies.

That’s all great, but does he smoke weed?

There’s not a lot of information out there, but on a Reddit Q&A he said that his character Andy Dwyer from “Parks and Recreation” was most likely a weed smoker. Which isn’t much to go on but at least it means Pratt doesn’t hate weed.

RELATED: Does Jennifer Lopez Smoke Weed?

“Here’s something you might not have known about those characters. They smoked a lot of weed. they’d probably be doing that right now,” he said.

chris pratt
Photo by an Gavan/Stringer/Getty Images

Digging a little deeper into Google searches, you can find a bit more on Pratt and his history. In 2014, Pratt uploaded an image of himself standing next to a Scooby Doo van during the time when he used to live in Hawaii and struggled to make it as an actor.

“Can’t believe I found this picture!!! That is the van I lived in!!! In my hand is the script for the movie that got me out of Maui. Crazy,” he wrote.

RELATED: Does Pete Buttigieg Smoke Weed?

In an interview with The Independent, Pratt discussed more on his life during that time period when he was homeless and living in that van. “It’s a pretty awesome place to be homeless,” he said. It would be different if I lived on the streets of Chicago and ate garbage from a dumpster. We just drank and smoked weed and worked minimal hours, 15-20 hours per week, just enough to cover gas, food and fishing supplies. You know, it was charming time.”

Bam! There we go. Despite the fact that there’s no confirmation of whether he currently continues to smoke or support marijuana, we know that he used to and that he’s not afraid to bring it up in random conversations.

Canadian Teenagers Quit Smoking Weed After Legalization

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A new report from Statistics Canada adds to a growing body of evidence that marijuana legalization dissuades adolescent use.

It would be wrong to state that marijuana legalization causes a drop in teenage use, due to a lack of rigorous scientific studies on the matter. A coloration is developing, however. According to a new report from Statistics Canada, teenage use of cannabis has declined following adult-use legalization in the country.

In ending prohibition, the Canadian government wanted to ensure they were creating a system where cannabis couldn’t easily end up in youth’s hands. Some took the idea and ran with it to hysterical levels — one conservative member of parliament asserted marijuana was “just as deadly” as fentanyl for children. Statistics Canada reported the rate of marijuana consumption between ages 15-17 was 19.8% in 2018. That figure dropped to 10.4% in 2019.

RELATED: Senior Citizens Are The Biggest Marijuana Users In Canada

Marijuana consumption rose from just above 15% to almost 17% for Canadians age 15 and older in the same time span. In total, 5.1 million Canadians reported using the plant last year. The high consumption occurred in eastern provinces, with 26% of Nova Scotia residents using marijuana and the lowest was 12% in Quebec, where home growing marijuana and edibles are banned.

Teenagers Now Disapprove Of Alcohol And Cigarettes, More Open To Weed And Vaping
Photo by Helena Lopes via pexels

To be fair, the Statistic Canada report is an imperfect representation.

“Information from the surveys was self-reported and has not been verified or validated,” the report reads. “Changes over time in respondents’ willingness to admit drug use, in their definition of what constitutes drug use, and in the perceived or real risk of legal consequences could neither be controlled nor detected, but could affect results.”

RELATED: Marijuana Legalization Discourages Teenage Use, Study Finds

Still, the results add to a growing body of evidence of how marijuana legalization could impact adolescent use. Washington state and Denver saw declining rates of teenage marijuana use following legalization. A study published in JAMA Pediatrics last year went one step further and suggested that legalization could discourage adolescent use.

“Consistent with the results of previous researchers, there was no evidence that the legalization of medical marijuana encourages marijuana use among youth,” researchers concluded. “Moreover, the estimates…showed that marijuana use among youth may actually decline after legalization for recreational purposes.”

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