You are here
Home 🌿 Marijuana Politics 🌿 Study: No spike in traffic-related injuries after Canada legalized recreational cannabis 🌿Study: No spike in traffic-related injuries after Canada legalized recreational cannabis
Neither Ontario nor Alberta — far and away, the leaders for the number of cannabis stores in the country — have witnessed a significant rise in emergency visits from traffic-related injuries since weed got the green light three years ago.
“There was no evidence of significant changes associated with cannabis legalization on post-legalization weekly counts of drivers’ traffic-injury ED visits,” researchers write.
Comparing the pre- and post-legalization periods, they specifically found that the number of weekly traffic-injury ED visits in Alberta was up by just 9.17 among all drivers and down by 0.66 visits among the young driver group.
The weekly ED visit tally in Ontario was somewhat more pronounced, with the total increasing by 28.93 among all drivers and up just 0.09 for youth drivers.
Research involving driving and cannabis is receiving increasing attention of late. Australian researchers recently concluded “road safety risks associated with medicinal cannabis appear similar or lower than numerous other potentially impairing prescription medications.”
And another Australian study suggested that using CBD does not impair driving performance and consuming moderate amounts of THC produces only mild impairment lasting up to four hours.
Still, Canadian students with more relaxed views of weed appear to be more likely to consume and drive than others in their age group. Indeed, slightly more than 10 per cent of Ontario high school-aged drivers admitted to having driven within an hour after using weed in the last year.
Another recently published Canadian study exploring ED visits — albeit related to weed intoxication at a single ED in Hamilton, Ont. — found treatment for acute cannabis intoxication was up among 18- to 29-year-olds, but not overall.
Those numbers differ considerably from a U.S. study out of Colorado, where adult-use cannabis has been legal since 2014. The Associated Press reported in March 2019 that weed-related ED visits to a Denver hospital witnessed a three-fold increase pre- and post-legalization. Investigators in that research pointed to inhaled cannabis and marijuana-infused edibles as the two main culprits for symptoms ranging from vomiting to racing hearts.
420 Intel is Your Source for Marijuana News
420 Intel Canada is your leading news source for the Canadian cannabis industry. Get the latest updates on Canadian cannabis stocks and developments on how Canada continues to be a major player in the worldwide recreational and medical cannabis industry.
420 Intel Canada is the Canadian Industry news outlet that will keep you updated on how these Canadian developments in recreational and medical marijuana will impact the country and the world. Our commitment is to bring you the most important cannabis news stories from across Canada every day of the week.
Marijuana industry news is a constant endeavor with new developments each day. For marijuana news across the True North, 420 Intel Canada promises to bring you quality, Canadian, cannabis industry news.
You can get 420 Intel news delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for our daily marijuana news, ensuring you’re always kept up to date on the ever-changing cannabis industry. To stay even better informed about marijuana legalization news follow us on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.