sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Edible pot products complicate a confusing marketplace

It鈥檚 easy to feel like a kid in a candy store at some of Victoria鈥檚 marijuana dispensaries. And that鈥檚 exactly what worries provincial and regional health authorities.
VKA-TreesEdibles-1215.jpg
Edible pot products are displayed at a Trees marijuana dispensary. Medical experts say there's no way to measure the potency of edible products.

It鈥檚 easy to feel like a kid in a candy store at some of Victoria鈥檚 marijuana dispensaries.

And that鈥檚 exactly what worries provincial and regional health authorities.

The enticing psychoactive gummy bears, lollipops, iced sugar cookies, brownies, Rice Krispies squares and cupcakes in a dozen delicious hues, tastes and flavours are definitely not for kids.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e attractive, they taste good and you wouldn鈥檛 know you were consuming [marijuana],鈥 said Dr. Richard Stanwick, Island Health鈥檚 chief medical officer of health.

鈥淭his has been associated with an increase in child hospitalizations in states where marijuana has become legal. The poisonings have shot up as much as six-fold.鈥

Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall shares Stanwick鈥檚 concern about the potential harm to children from marijuana edibles.

鈥淚t gets into the wrong hands pretty easily and it really normalizes it,鈥 Kendall said. 鈥淎nd we don鈥檛 want it to be commercialized, normalized or attractive and to become part of people鈥檚 everyday lives.鈥

In Colorado, where marijuana edibles are legal, a lot of children have turned up in the emergency room after eating edibles carelessly left around, Kendall said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not good for kids to have an overdose. And adults can have an overdose as well.鈥

Both doctors are concerned that there鈥檚 no way to measure the quality or potency of the dosage in edibles.

鈥淵ou can have a brownie. You eat it. You don鈥檛 get high. You eat another piece. You don鈥檛 get high because it takes more than an hour to come on through the stomach. By the time it does come on, you realize you鈥檝e taken way too much,鈥 Kendall said.

Consumers have to realize the product is not coming from an approved source, Stanwick said.

鈥淭hey are putting their faith in the operators of these establishments. And it鈥檚 buyer beware.鈥

According to Stanwick, medicine still has a lot to learn about cannabis to see how it fits into pain control and appetite stimulation.

鈥淲ouldn鈥檛 it be nice to know what is an effective dose instead of people just taking what they get and maybe or maybe not getting what they are looking for?鈥

The dispensaries are not licensed, so they are not inspected.

鈥淚ronically, if you wanted to open a small cookie shop in Victoria, you would immediately get a visit from Island Health, literally the day you opened up, if you hadn鈥檛 got your certification,鈥 noted one medical-marijuana industry insider.

鈥淣ow, if you decide to do the same thing today and put pot in your cookies, no one will visit you and no one will come and test your product for safety or make sure it鈥檚 cooked in an Island Health safe kitchen. I find it ironic from a food-security and public-health point of view.鈥

In April 2015, 64 people 鈥 about 0.3 per cent 鈥 of the participants in Vancouver鈥檚 4/20 rally were admitted to St. Paul鈥檚 Hospital during the afternoon and evening with nausea, vomiting and dizziness. Patricia Daly, the chief medical health officer at Vancouver Coastal Health, said of those who disclosed what they had taken, 36 consumed edibles, 13 smoked pot and five did both.

The health authority is in favour of legalizing cannabis for medical and recreational use and getting rid of criminal penalties, Kendall said.

鈥淏ut we would like to see a very restrictive regime that doesn鈥檛 commercialize it. You need the constraints around advertising, packaging, warning levels and dosages that tobacco has, but limits where it can be sold. So it would be a more rigid regime than currently surrounds the sale of alcoholic products.鈥

Kendall would also like to see age and dosing limitations.

[email protected]