| Literature DB >> 34251442 |
Natasha Y Sheikhan1,2, Ashlyn M Pinto3, Dominik A Nowak1,4, Farbod Abolhassani1, Patrick Lefebvre5, Mei Sheng Duh6,7, Theodore J Witek1.
Abstract
Importance: As global jurisdictions shift toward cannabis legalization, 2 areas of public health importance relate to exposure to youth and to truthful promotion. Although Canada's Cannabis Act specifies many prohibitions related to cannabis promotion, no systematic monitoring or enforcement among licensed firms exists. Compliance with marketing regulations has effects beyond Canadian citizens because of the global outreach of websites and social media.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34251442 PMCID: PMC8276085 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.16551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Codebook Violations and Subcategories as Reflected in the Cannabis Act
| Code | Cannabis Act (bill C-45) excerpt[ | Criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Lack of fair balance | It is prohibited to promote cannabis in a manner that is likely to create an erroneous impression about its characteristics, value, quantity, composition, strength, concentration, potency, purity, quality, merit, safety, health effects or health risks [§18.A] | Cannabis benefits listed on the main page, whereas cannabis risks are less accessible |
| Unsubstantiated medical claim | It is prohibited to promote cannabis in a manner that is false, misleading, or deceptive [§18.A] | False or misleading claims about cannabis, including lack of evidence or overstating known therapeutic benefits |
| Communication of information about price or distribution | Communicating information about its price or distribution [§17A] | Communicating about cost or promotions, such as competitive prices or special sales during holidays |
| Lack of age restrictions for youth | Reasonable grounds to believe could be appealing to young persons [§17B] | Not requiring viewers to insert their birthday for websites or not mentioning age limits in the biography for social media pages |
| Glamorizing the brand | By presenting it or any of its brand elements in a manner that associates it or the brand element with, or evokes a positive or negative emotion about or image of, a way of life such as one that includes glamour, recreation, excitement, vitality, risk or daring [§17F] | Selling merchandise with their product on it or slogans related to cannabis, images or videos related to social activities and leisure activities, and website designs that evoked glamour |
| Depiction | By means of the depiction of a person, character, or animal, whether real or fictional [§17D] | Multimedia of a person, character, or animal (eg, holding cannabis or a cannabis accessory, being in the same frame as a cannabis plant, positioned next to a claim) |
| Endorsement | By means of a testimonial or endorsement, however displayed or communicated [§17C] | Patient, physician, or consumer testimonial regarding the company's cannabis |
| Omission of risk information | It is prohibited to promote cannabis in a manner that is likely to create an erroneous impression about its characteristics, value, quantity, composition, strength, concentration, potency, purity, quality, merit, safety, health effects or health risks [§18.A] | Exclusion of any risk information regarding the medical use of cannabis |
| Violation from an external link | Any violation above [§17-18A] | Link within online venue that leads to violative content in an external source |
These codes were excluded if there was no claim or mention of medical cannabis on venue.
Summary Statistics for License Holders Granted by Health Canada After Legalization, Aggregated by Sales and Nonsales Licenses
| Variable | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| License | Total (N = 261) | ||
| Sales | Nonsales (n = 117) | ||
| Firms with no online platform | 17 (11.8) | 33 (28.2) | 50 (19.2) |
| Firms with online platform | 127 (88.2) | 84 (71.8) | 211 (80.8) |
| Website | 127 (100.0) | 77 (91.7) | 204 (96.7) |
| 82 (64.6) | 46 (54.8) | 128 (60.7) | |
| 78 (61.4) | 45 (53.6) | 123 (58.3) | |
| 78 (61.4) | 45 (53.6) | 123 (58.3) | |
| Online media violations (% of license holders with online presence) | |||
| No violations | 17 (13.4) | 12 (14.3) | 29 (13.7) |
| At least 1 violation | 110 (86.6) | 72 (85.7) | 182 (86.3) |
| Violations (at least 1) by platform (% of license holders with a specific platform) | |||
| Website | 87 (68.5) | 53 (68.8) | 140 (68.6) |
| 73 (89.0) | 40 (87.0) | 113 (88.3) | |
| 64 (82.1) | 40 (88.9) | 104 (84.6) | |
| 63 (80.8) | 35 (77.8) | 98 (79.7) | |
| Violation (at least 1) by type (% of license holders with online presence) | |||
| Depiction | 42 (33.1) | 21 (25.0) | 63 (29.9) |
| Glamorization of brand | 63 (49.6) | 35 (41.7) | 98 (46.4) |
| Omission of risk information | 47 (37.0) | 24 (28.6) | 71 (33.6) |
| Promotion to those <18 y of age | 81 (63.8) | 60 (71.4) | 141 (66.8) |
| Unsubstantiated claim | 48 (37.8) | 19 (22.6) | 67 (31.8) |
| Other | 37 (29.1) | 13 (15.5) | 50 (23.7) |
| Frequency of violations by type (% of total No. of types of violations) | |||
| Depiction | 86 (14.2) | 38 (11.6) | 124 (13.3) |
| Glamorization of brand | 149 (24.5) | 88 (26.9) | 237 (29.3) |
| Omission of risk information | 89 (14.7) | 39 (11.9) | 128 (22.3) |
| Promotion to those <18 y of age | 132 (21.7) | 107 (32.7) | 239 (53.7) |
| Unsubstantiated claim | 89 (14.7) | 32 (9.8) | 121 (58.7) |
| Other | 62 (10.2) | 23 (7.0) | 85 (100.0) |
Firms with a sales license are encoded as sale (medical), sale (medical) cultivation, sale (medical) processing, or sale (medical) processing cultivation. All other firms considered as no sales license.
Total firms with online platform is the count of all firms with at least 1 online platform (ie, website, Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter).
Violations by platform conditional on whether the firm has presence on a given platform. Denominator is the number of firms present on a given platform.
Violations (at least 1) by type calculated conditional on violation occurring on any of the 4 online platforms. Denominator is total firms with online platform.
Frequency of violations by type represents the percentage of a specific type of violation of the total number of violations across all platforms.
Frequency of Types of Violations and Odds of at Least 1 Violation on a Platform
| Variable | Frequency of types of violations (n = 578) | At least 1 violation (n = 578) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rate ratio (95% CI) | Odds ratio (95% CI) | |||
| Platform | ||||
| Website | 1 [Reference] | NA | 1 [Reference] | NA |
| 1.24 (1.11-1.39) | <.001 | 3.02 (1.61-5.68) | <.001 | |
| 1.19 (1.05-1.34) | .005 | 2.15 (1.20-3.88) | .01 | |
| 1.11 (0.98-1.27) | .10 | 1.52 (0.88-2.64) | .14 | |
| Region | ||||
| Ontario | 1 [Reference] | NA | 1 [Reference] | NA |
| Atlantic provinces | 1.11 (0.97-1.28) | .13 | 1.76 (0.76-4.06) | .18 |
| British Columbia | 1.11 (1.00-1.24) | .053 | 1.71 (0.98-2.97) | .06 |
| Prairies | 1.08 (0.96-1.22) | .21 | 1.42 (0.80-2.51) | .23 |
| Quebec | 1.08 (0.88-1.33) | .47 | 1.47 (0.60-3.60) | .39 |
| No. of platforms | 1.05 (0.98-1.11) | .16 | 1.18 (0.94-1.49) | .16 |
| Sales license | 0.96 (0.87-1.05) | .36 | 0.82 (0.52-1.31) | .41 |
| License awarded before October 2018 | 1.12 (1.01-1.24) | .03 | 1.75 (1.07-2.87) | .03 |
Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
The rate ratios correspond to the exponential of the coefficients estimated by Poisson regression. Odds ratios correspond to the exponential of the coefficients estimated by logistic regression.
Atlantic provinces include New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.
Prairies include Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
Figure. Forest Plot of the Odds Ratios (ORs) for at Least 1 Violation on a Platform by Types of Violations
The ORs correspond to the exponential of the coefficients estimated by a logistic regression. Atlantic provinces include New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. Prairies include Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan. Other violations include any violation not mentioned in the table. Error bars indicate 95% CIs. NA indicates not applicable.