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Loneliness and cannabis use among older adults: findings from a Canada national survey during the COVID-19 pandemic

Faculty Advisor

Date

2024

Keywords

loneliness, cannabis use, healthy aging

Abstract (summary)

Background: Cannabis use has been increasing among older adults in Canada, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aims to examine the association between loneliness and cannabis use among older Canadians during the pandemic. Methods: Quantitative data analyses were performed based on 2,020 participants aged 55 years and older from the Canadian Perspectives Survey Series 6, 2021: Substance Use and Stigma During the Pandemic. Results: This study found that participants who used cannabis in the 30 days before the survey reported significantly higher loneliness scores than those who never used cannabis after adjusting social-demographic, social interaction, and pandemic-related factors. Participants who kept using cannabis during the pandemic also reported significantly higher loneliness scores than those who never used cannabis. Conclusion: The findings about the correlation between cannabis use and greater loneliness contribute to the discourse on potential health and wellbeing harms of cannabis use among older adults.

Publication Information

Li, L., & Deng, Q. (2024). Loneliness and cannabis use among older adults: Findings from a Canada national survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. BMC Public Health, 24 (2983). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-20499-5

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)