If you are in distress, you can call or text 988 at any time. If it is an emergency, call 9-1-1 or go to your local emergency department.

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!

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

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!

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Feedback Form

Hey, thanks for checking out this resource. After you’ve seen it, we’d love to learn a bit more about your interests and how you found us. Was the information what you looking for? Was it helpful? We’ll use any feedback you provide to further improve what we do.

Are you willing to be contacted within 3 to 6 months for a short follow-up survey?
In case of “Yes” – please provide an email address

SHARE THIS PAGE

RELATED

Review our Assessment Framework for Mental Health Apps — a national framework containing key standards for safe, quality, and effective mental health apps in Canada.

To help expand the use of e-mental health services, we developed four online learning modules based on our Toolkit for E-Mental Health Implementation, in collaboration with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH).

Stepped Care 2.0© (SC2.0) is a transformative model for organizing and delivering evidence-informed mental health and substance use services.

This resource was published in 2020. The data may be out of date. People living with mental health and substance use issues need prompt access to quality health care. Sometimes they receive it, but often they do not. Significant barriers stand in the way when people with lived experience seek access to care, with many...

This resource was published in 2020. The data may be out of date. People living with mental health and substance use issues need prompt access to quality health care. Sometimes they receive it, but often they do not. Significant barriers stand in the way when people with lived experience seek access to care, with many...