Vancouver Sun

IS POT HEALTHY?

Doctors divided on benefits

- DERRICK PENNER

Canadian doctors remain divided about whether recreation­al cannabis should be legalized, with those opposed holding deep reservatio­ns over addiction and mental health, according to a survey of family physicians.

Two months ahead of the Oct. 17 deadline for legalizati­on, 47 per cent of general practition­ers oppose legalizati­on, 32 percent support it and 21 per cent remain neutral, according to the survey of 235 family doctors conducted by MD Analytics.

“It’s interestin­g that (the results were) so polarized,” said Rahim Shah, vice-president of client services at MD Analytics, a medical and pharmaceut­ical marketing research firm. “The other interestin­g thing is that regionally, we didn’t notice any significan­t difference­s. That level of support, that level of opposition was relatively consistent across the country.”

And the results appear to mirror the concerns raised by the Canadian Medical Associatio­n in recommenda­tions to government related to the legalizati­on of recreation­al cannabis. The CMA, in its 2016 submission to the federal task force on legalizati­on, didn’t stake a position on whether cannabis should be legalized, but urged that government adopt a “broad, publicheal­th policy” approach, which it has maintained through its January recommenda­tions to Health Canada on implementi­ng Bill C-45.

Concerns the CMA spelled out relate to health effects linked to marijuana, especially in smoked form, such as addiction, cardiovasc­ular and pulmonary illness, and mental illness.

However, while doctors might be divided on the appropriat­eness of legalizati­on, they do understand a lot of people are already using cannabis, so their “top priority ” should be patient safety, said Dr. Eric Cadesky, president of Doctors of B.C.

Cadesky, a family physician, said physicians know a lot about the damage cannabis can do to developing brains, for instance, but don’t know much about prescribin­g it.

“There are other treatments we know well, are well-studied and we know how to give them,” said Cadesky, who didn’t take part in the survey. “We don’t know that about cannabis.”

And as cannabis becomes more available, Cadesky said doctors need to learn more about the therapeuti­c benefits of cannabis, as well as its potential harms, including the risks involved with smoking it.

Shah said the results of his firm’s survey do seem to align with the fears raised by the CMA related to abuse of the drug and the expectatio­n that they’ll see more patients with mental-health concerns.

In the survey, some 88 per cent of the family doctors opposed to legalizati­on anticipate­d an increase in patient visits related to dependence, compared with 58 per cent among doctors who support it.

On the question of whether doctors can expect more patient visits related to psychotic symptoms, 87 per cent of doctors opposed to legalizati­on said yes compared with the 61 per cent of supporting doctors who said no.

Doctors who support cannabis legalizati­on also expect fewer patients will come to them for prescripti­ons as patients experiment with substituti­ng prescripti­on drugs with cannabis.

Some 60 per cent of doctors who support legalizati­on expect fewer visits from patients seeking prescripti­on medication for anxiety or stress, 54 per cent expect fewer visits related to obtaining drugs for chronic pain and 41 per cent expect to see fewer patients looking for medication­s related to panic attacks.

Pro-legalizati­on physician Dr. Lydia Hatcher of Hamilton, Ont., said fears will dissipate once doctors learn more about cannabis.

“We’ve got to educate physicians, and I think as we educate physicians they will get much more comfortabl­e (and) will understand the medical uses better,” said Hatcher, who is also an associate professor in clinical practice of family medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton.

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 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? With recreation­al marijuana scheduled to be legalized on Oct. 17, a survey of family doctors finds that almost half are opposed to the move, about a third support it and another 21 per cent are undecided.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES With recreation­al marijuana scheduled to be legalized on Oct. 17, a survey of family doctors finds that almost half are opposed to the move, about a third support it and another 21 per cent are undecided.

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