July 5, 2017
Marijuana age limit should be low - not high
Lowering the legal age for marijuana use will help to improve prevention, safety and education for young people.
As the public debate on legalization of cannabis in Canada gains momentum, one of most contentious recommendations is to set the age of 18 as the floor for access. Because provinces have jurisdiction, we may see variations in the law when it is implemented across Canada.
I am one of a few vocal advocates for a harmonized policy with the age of access set at 18 years. I am a youth substance-use researcher with a PhD in behavioural health sciences and addiction studies. I have studied adolescent cannabis and tobacco use for more than a decade, and currently co-lead the TRACE program to understand teen cannabis culture. Based on this, I believe a lower age is better for two key reasons: It will help to divert youth from illicit markets, and it will prompt an earlier start for cannabis prevention and education.
Since legalization was announced, associations that represent medical professionals in Canada have argued for the age of access to be set at 21. The groups include the and the .
Their stances stem from a 2015 report by the , which has been used to recommend an age floor of 24 or 25. This is based on emerging research of cannabis-use effects on brain structure and function in the developmental period that extends into the mid-twenties. declined to specify an age, but focused on harmonizing the legal access age with those for tobacco and alcohol.
Social cost is high
As I have , setting the age of access higher based on the evidence for potential brain harm neglects social costs of a criminal record for cannabis possession. For example, an arrest record limits one鈥檚 ability to travel outside Canada, be bonded for employment or volunteer in the community.
Young people do not respond well to scare tactics when it comes to cannabis or other drugs.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
Without a 鈥渃lean鈥 criminal record, a person would be unable to participate in mundane but important activities: coaching a children鈥檚 soccer team or volunteering to chaperone their school field trips. Such a person certainly could not be a foster parent or adopt a child.
In the long, historical policy debate on cannabis legalization in Canada, we鈥檝e been taught that cannabis use is illegal and bad. That poses a challenge now that we say continuing to criminalize cannabis use doesn鈥檛 make good policy sense.
offers a 鈥減ublic health approach鈥 for legalizing drugs, which 鈥渞ecognizes that people use substances for anticipated beneficial effects and is attentive to the potential harms of the substances and the unintended effects of control policies鈥 It seeks to ensure that harms associated with control interventions are not out of proportion to the benefit-to-harm ratios of the substances.鈥
Similarly, the report explains why greater restrictions on youth access aren鈥檛 necessarily protective policy choices: 鈥淓xcessive restrictions could lead to the re-entrenchment of the illicit market.鈥
Youth behaviour varies
In short: Set the age too high and youth will continue to seek cannabis through existing, unregulated suppliers. The product will be of unknown quality and safety due to THC content (the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis), additives such as pesticides, or mould contamination.
Illicit cannabis is easily accessible to youth at any time. Our who use cannabis supports Prime Minister Justin Trudeau鈥檚 about youth having easy access to cannabis, more than tobacco or alcohol.
In the that began in British Columbia in 2006, we spoke to teens who were frequent cannabis users. It was the first study in Canada that aimed to explore the culture and context of teen use from their own perspective.
Contrary to a 鈥渟toner鈥 stereotype, some used cannabis as a 鈥溾 to enhance outdoor activities such as biking or skiing. Cannabis use was and used in different ways by boys and girls. Teens were also aware of the (smoking tobacco and cannabis together) and some engaged in what we called 鈥溾 use to deal with or manage health problems.
Perhaps most importantly, our research highlighted the value of on the evidence about cannabis use, and applying findings to shape prevention efforts that might better resonate with youth.
Degrassi TV series a model for education
Much of my approach as a teen substance use researcher comes from my experience as an actress: I was one of the original cast of the popular Degrassi teen television series from about age 13 to 19.
CYCLES was a film produced from research on youth to educate young people about cannabis.
Rebecca Haines-Saah
Key to the franchise鈥檚 success and 30-year longevity has been its edgy and honest way of addressing teen coming-of-age issues. No topic is off-limits, including suicide, abortion and drug use. The strategy is the antithesis of the 1980s 鈥渁fter-school special鈥 network television narrative, in which adults save the day when a kid gets into serious trouble. Degrassi storylines take an honest and non-judgmental approach to teen experiences and dilemmas, in which youth first turn to peers to solve their own problems.
This is where we often go wrong in programming for young people: We don鈥檛 consult, include or listen to them in a meaningful way when developing programming for them, and wonder why our 鈥渁dults know best鈥 approach fails.
A youth-centered approach explicitly informed the that was developed from the TRACE research program.
CYCLES aimed to be a tool for teachers to have open and honest dialogue with students about cannabis use. It was a type of non-judgmental and 鈥渞eality based鈥 prevention tool teachers lacked.
The film does not harp on the potential for health or legal consequences of cannabis use. Instead, it focuses on how teens make decisions about cannabis in the context of peer and romantic relationships. We did this because our research showed scare tactics turned teenagers off and were unlikely to prevent or reduce use in their view.
Ultimately, the main character in CYCLES decides to move away from cannabis use when he sees the impact it has on his girlfriend, how his use may be influencing his younger sibling and could compromise a part-time job that he loves 鈥 not because an adult told him unequivocally to 鈥渏ust say no.鈥
Drug use a social ritual
Experimentation with psychoactive substances has been a coming of age ritual for North American adolescents for generations. Like sexuality, youth initiate these experiences because they mark 鈥済rown-up鈥 status and entail pleasure, social connections and peer bonding. They also hold potential for physical and emotional harm.
Yet drug education is unlike current approaches to sex education in which we see the value of teaching youth active consent and decision-making to prevent harm from 鈥渞isky,鈥 coerced or unprotected sex.
In cannabis and other drug prevention, we cannot get beyond an abstinence-based mandate. We fear that teaching children and youth about reducing drug harm is the same as enabling drug use.
We won鈥檛 be able to legislate or educate away these behaviours, if history is any guide. Prevention and education for youth, how we talk to them and 鈥 most importantly 鈥 whether or not we listen to them matters more than what the law says about when they鈥檙e old enough to buy it.
When cannabis is no longer an illicit substance we will have the latitude to do more and better prevention. Legalization with a low age of access will create the context and impetus to prevent potential harms of cannabis use through a truly youth-centered approach.