Seniors’ use of cannabis and their support for its legalization is on the upswing.
According to nationwide polling data compiled by the Pew Research Center, nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of boomers (those born in the United States between the years 1946 and 1964) now say that marijuana ought to be legal for adults. That percentage is up significantly from a decade ago, when fewer than one-in-three seniors endorsed its legalization.
Some of this change in attitude is arguably the result of more seniors having firsthand experience with cannabis. According to data published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, the percentage of Americans age 65 or older who report having consumed marijuana in the previous year has increased 10-fold in the past 15 years.
Why are increasing numbers of seniors turning to — or in some cases, returning to — cannabis? For starters, in many jurisdictions, marijuana’s legal status has changed. Medical cannabis is now legally available in 33 states and throughout Canada — providing many older adults for the first time with safe, above-ground, uninterrupted access to an array of marijuana products.
This access is pivotal to older consumers, as the majority of seniors prefer non-herbal, non-smoked cannabis preparations, such as marijuana-infused capsules or edibles — preparations that are rarely available in the illicit marketplace.
Furthermore, seniors are becoming more familiar with and accepting of cannabis’ therapeutic properties. Not only are increasing numbers of seniors becoming aware that cannabis can mitigate many of the health-related symptoms that come with older age, such as chronic pain, but they also understand that it can do so with fewer side-effects than many prescription drugs, like opioids.
According to survey data compiled by the dispensary chain Verilife, nearly three-out-of-four boomers define their marijuana use as “medical.” And increasing body of literature is affirming that it is safe and effective for them.
Specifically, data from Israel — where medical cannabis is available by prescription — finds that more than 90 percent of seniors engaged in cannabis therapy report improvements in their symptoms.
Nearly one-in-five Israeli seniors surveyed also reported either ceasing or reducing their use of opioids, while the majority of respondents said that cannabis significantly improved their overall quality of life.
Studies from elderly patients in the United States show similar results. For instance, data compiled in 2019 by researchers affiliated with the University of Colorado School of Medicine reported that past-year cannabis use among those ages 60 and older “improved overall health, quality of life, (and) day-to-day functioning.”
Separate data presented at the annual meeting of the American Geriatrics Society reports that more than half of seniors surveyed reduced their use of opiates following the initiation of medical cannabis.
Most recently, data published in August in the journal Clinical Gerontologist assessed seniors’ use of medical cannabis on health-related outcomes over a one-year period. Investigators reported a “strong positive association” between subjects’ frequency of marijuana use and self-reported improvements in pain, healthcare utilization, and overall health-related quality of life.
Participants failed to report any statistically significant association between medical cannabis use and adverse events.
This shift in the demographics of marijuana consumers holds significant political implications. Not only does it strengthen overall public support in favor of marijuana law reform, but it also galvanizes support among arguably the most reliable and powerful voting block — seniors.
As their attitudes continue to evolve on cannabis, expect to see many politicians at the state and federal levels shift their views as well.