Five years later, researchers say the impacts of legalizing cannabis in Canada have been mixed
Five years later, researchers say the impacts of legalizing cannabis in Canada have been mixed

Five years later, researchers say the impacts of legalizing cannabis in Canada have been mixed

Since Canada's legalization of cannabis five years ago, researchers say the policy has had mixed results in terms of public health and justice reform.
So the biggest negative about the legalization of cannabis is an increase in hospital admissions due to inadvertent edible use. And more children-young adults admitting they consumed cannabis. Though i wonder if relaxed views on its use prompted more under aged people to truthfully admit to its use then an actual increase in use.
There is need for adults to better monitor their drugs but other then that it seems to be a massive success.
We can't ignore how it's impacted traffic safety, though.
DUI, for example, seems to have skyrocketed since legalization. , while drunk driving didn't budge.
https://tc.canada.ca/en/road-transportation/statistics-data/canadian-motor-vehicle-traffic-collision-statistics-2021
It's a very specific measure in the data you published, and the capacity to get a statistically unbiased measure pre-legalization would be difficult due to availability and protocol around THC testing.
Although I WHOLEHEARTEDLY agree that it's something that needs to be very carefully studied and monitored and legislated around... The answer to the question "are the roads more or less safe before or after legalization?" Is "They are equally safe within statistical margins"
Yup, just imagine the gall it'd take to look at the US prison system full of drug arrests and think, "Well, it's working alright for them."
I am so elated that a safe hallucinagen is no longer restricted and causing social woes.
Cannabis isn't a hallucinogen. You could call it a "recreational drug" when not used for medical purposes.