The Fiji Times

UN report: Cannabis use has risen with legalisati­on and COVID lockdowns

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A worker smokes a joint at a medical cannabis cafe in Tira, an Arab village in central Israel March 2, 2022.

VIENNA - Places including US states that have legalised cannabis appear to have increased its regular use, while COVID lockdowns had a similar effect, raising the risk of depression and suicide, a UN report said on Monday.

Cannabis has long been the world’s most widely used drug and that use is increasing while the cannabis on the market is getting stronger in terms of its tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC) content, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said in its annual World Drug Report.

Various US states have legalised non-medical use of cannabis, starting with Washington and Colorado in 2012. Uruguay legalised it in 2013, as did Canada in 2018. Others have taken similar steps but the report focused on those three countries.

“Cannabis legalisati­on appears to have accelerate­d the upwards trends in reported daily use of the drug,” the Vienna-based UNODC’s report said.

While the prevalence of cannabis use among teenagers “has not changed much”, there had been “a pronounced increase in reported frequent use of high-potency products among young adults”, it said.

“The proportion of people with psychiatri­c disorders and suicides associated with regular cannabis use has increased.”

The report said roughly 284 million people, or 5.6 per cent of the world’s population, had used a drug such as heroin, cocaine, amphetamin­es or ecstasy in 2020, the most recent data available.

Of those, 209 million used cannabis.”

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