Get comfortable talking about cannabis, pediatricians advise

Health-care providers are being provided with new guidance about discussing cannabis use with their young patients, thanks to a group of experts co-led by a McMaster University faculty member.

By Tina Depko, Faculty of Health Sciences June 5, 2020

Christina Grant is an associate professor of pediatrics at McMaster.

Health-care providers are being provided with new guidance about discussing cannabis use with their young patients, thanks to a group of experts co-led by a McMaster University faculty member.

The Canadian Pediatric Society Cannabis Project Advisory Group, co-chaired by McMaster’s Christina Grant, is behind the recommendations and tools.

This guidance is being published in Paediatrics & Child Health, in an issue which will also include articles for primary care providers on cannabis and breastfeeding, edibles, and cannabis vaping.

“Cannabis is the most common substance for youth to seek substance abuse treatment for,” said Grant, associate professor of pediatrics at McMaster and an adolescent medicine specialist at McMaster Children’s Hospital. “By normalizing a conversation between adolescents and their health-care providers, we hope to reduce the number of cases requiring that level of care.”

Recommendations for clinicians include:

  • Assure patient of confidentiality and ask permission to discuss cannabis use.
  • Answer all patient questions honestly, to the best of your abilities.
  • Assess possible impacts of cannabis use on family life, school, work and personal relationships.
  • Collaborate with the patient to set specific and realistic goals.
  • Arrange regular follow-up with patients using cannabis.
  • Acknowledge parental needs and concerns about cannabis when they arise.

A 2019 survey showed that nearly half of Canadian adolescents between 16 and 19 years of age had used cannabis during the previous year. One in six youths who use cannabis will go on to misuse it.

Two clinical tools, including a visual guide to cannabis and information for parents, accompany the guidance document and can be accessed at www.cps.ca/en/cannabis.

“Respect for the patient is at the heart of this guidance,” said Grant. “We want teens to see their health-care provider as a trusted source of information and a partner in their decision-making.”

The project was funded by Health Canada.

Angelica McQuarrie, wearing a shirt with the logo for the McMaster Physical Activity Centre of Excellence, in a room full of fitness equipment. In the top left corner is the People of McMaster logo.

Angelica McQuarrie is ‘the steady force’ that keeps PACE going

The program manager at the Physical Activity Centre of Excellence — a place unlike any other — creates a community where everyone feels like they belong.
Two researchers standing side-by-side in a university corridor.

McMaster scientists celebrated for leadership in virology

Miller has received the Grandvaux-McCormick Award for Service to Canadian Virology, and Mossman has been honoured with the CSV’s Mentor Award for Senior Investigators. 
Marcy McCall MacBain, Susan Tighe, Jen Heisz and McMaster students chat with an older adult who is working out in a gym setting.

$50M McCall MacBain Foundation gift propels McMaster’s leadership in helping people live longer in good health

The largest philanthropic gift to kinesiology in Canadian university history supports a long-term vision for global healthspan research, education, health policy and community impact.