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Closing Research Gaps on Cannabis and Mental Health – Immigrant, Refugee, Ethnocultural, and Racialized Population Findings

Over the past five years, the MHCC has led a pan-Canadian research program to assess the impact of cannabis legalization and use on the mental health of diverse populations. This document synthesizes key themes that emerged from three studies exploring the relationship between cannabis and mental health among immigrant, refugee, ethnocultural, and racialized (IRER) populations, with a particular focus on youth.

Key findings:

  1. IRER populations have distinct risk and protective factors that shape the relationship between cannabis and mental health.
  2. Cannabis is often used as an alternative to formal supports and systemic barriers.
  3. IRER youth want culturally tailored information, techniques, and supports that empower them.

Interested in the other reports in this series? Find them here!

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Over the past five years, the MHCC has led a pan-Canadian research program to assess the impact of cannabis legalization and use on the mental health of diverse populations. This...

Over the past five years, the MHCC has led a pan-Canadian research program to assess the impact of cannabis legalization and use on the mental health of diverse populations. This...

Over the past five years, the MHCC has led a pan-Canadian research program to assess the impact of cannabis legalization and its use on the mental health of diverse populations....