New study finds cannabis poisonings among senior citizens have tripled

The push to legalize cannabis has led to a significant increase in senior citizens going to hospital emergency rooms because of cannabis poisoning, a newly released Canadian study revealed.

Researchers analyzed “the association between edible cannabis legalization and emergency department visits for cannabis poisoning” in adults in Ontario, Canada, who were at least 65 years old. The study found that the number of senior citizens who visited emergency departments in hospitals due to cannabis poisoning tripled after Canada legalized edible cannabis. 

“There’s a bit of an age-related bias that many healthcare practitioners, and frankly society, hold that older adults are not using drugs. And that’s not true,” said Dr. Nathan Stall, one of the study’s authors. “We found that the largest increases in emergency department visits for cannabis poisoning among seniors occurred after edible cannabis became legal for retail sale in January 2020.”

Canada first legalized the sale of “dried cannabis flowers” for recreational use in October 2018. A little over a year later, in January 2020, the country legalized the sale of edible cannabis. Over a nearly eight-year period, using the data made available from the Ontario Ministry of Health, researchers studied the frequency of senior citizens who visited emergency rooms at hospitals because of cannabis poisoning. The study analyzed the number of visits that occurred before cannabis legalization and after legalization. 

The pre-legalization period that was analyzed was from January 2015 to September 2018. The post-legalization time frame, however, was divided into two parts. The first was from October 2018 to December 2019, when Canada legalized only “dried cannabis flower.” The second was between January 2020 and December 2022, after Canada legalized cannabis edibles. 

“While the design of our study limited us from determining whether poisonings were unintentional or intentional, we suspect both contributed to the harms we observed,” Stall said in MedPage Today. “Older adults are prone to unintentional poisonings because edible cannabis products are visually attractive and palatable and may be taken in error, being easily confused with non-cannabis food items.”

The study’s authors emphasized that their findings corresponded to “national US data showing that edible cannabis accounts for an increasing proportion of cannabis poisoning in older adults.” Additionally, they warned of the “consequences associated with edible cannabis” and stressed the importance for areas that have legalized cannabis to “consider measures to mitigate unintentional exposure in older adults and age-specific dosing guidance.”

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Two doctors unaffiliated with the research efforts warned that the discoveries represented a “cautionary tale of legalization of substances.”

“This study provides a cautionary tale of legalization of substances without adequate research, education, and counseling of users regarding adverse effects and safe usage, particularly in older adults,” Dr. Lona Mody and Dr. Sharon K. Inouye said in a statement.

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