Chances are if you watch television, or read magazines, or browse major media websites, you will see advertising for pharmaceutical products. We have all seen the pharmaceutical commercial where the portion of the TV advertisement describing the side effects of the product is longer than the description of the benefits of the product. Such advertising is commonplace, and no one bats an eye. However, in Canada, medical cannabis advertising is so frowned upon that it is essentially going to be banned in the near future. Per Vice:
In a few weeks, Canadian cannabis patients will find it harder than ever to get information about their medicine.
Last month, Health Canada (the federal government’s public health agency) sent a letter to 16 licensed pot producers saying they can’t display photos of plants on their sites, tweet links to articles about the benefits of marijuana, or tell clients what a certain strain tastes, smells, or feels like.
All of that information is advertising, according to the government, and it’s illegal to promote the sale of a narcotic like “marihuana.”
The ban on medical cannabis advertising in Canada is ludicrous. Of course, there can be common sense restrictions that everyone can agree upon as no one is advocating that medical marijuana be marketed to children. However, it doesn’t make sense to ban the advertising of one medicine, when other substances that are more lethal, are allowed to advertise Pharmaceutical drug overdoses kill many people every year in Canada, but cannabis has never caused a fatal overdose, in Canada or anywhere.
Many pharmaceutical commercials contain disclaimers about the deadly side effects that you wonder if you are listening to a Saturday Night Live skit. Alcohol and tobacco are more addictive and dangerous substances and are allowed to advertise, with certain restrictions. So why is medical cannabis being singled out? This ban will hurt patients, in addition to the industry, and that’s unacceptable. Hopefully, common sense rules and regulations will prevail over such Reefer Madness restrictions.