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California must keep its promise to protect kids from big cannabis – Capitol Weekly

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CED Clinical Relevance
#35 Clinical Context
Background information relevant to the evolving cannabis medicine landscape.
PolicySafetyPediatrics
Why This Matters
# Clinical Relevance
Pediatric cannabis exposure remains a significant public health concern, as inadequate regulatory enforcement in California could increase adolescent access to products and potency levels that pose developmental risks to the brain during critical growth periods. Clinicians treating youth should be aware of evolving state regulatory gaps that may impact the prevalence of cannabis use disorder, acute psychiatric symptoms, and cannabis hyperemesis syndrome they encounter in practice. Clear regulatory protections strengthen the clinical foundation for prevention counseling and allow providers to give patients accurate information about legal product standards and actual market conditions.
Clinical Summary

California’s Proposition 64 legalization framework included commitments to implement strict youth protection measures, yet regulatory enforcement has reportedly fallen short of these voter-mandated safeguards. The article argues that inadequate regulation of the commercial cannabis industry has allowed marketing practices and retail distribution patterns that increase youth access and appeal, undermining the public health promises made during legalization. As cannabis products become increasingly potent and diversified in the legal marketplace, gaps in regulatory oversight create clinical concerns regarding adolescent exposure to high-THC formulations during critical developmental periods. These regulatory failures have broader implications for clinicians who must address rising rates of cannabis use disorder and cannabis hyperemesis syndrome in younger patients, despite legal age restrictions. Clinicians should stay informed about their state’s regulatory gaps and advocate for stronger enforcement of youth protection standards while counseling patients on the neurobiological risks of early cannabis use.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“The regulatory framework we sold California voters in 2016 hasn’t materialized the way we promised, and that matters clinically because adolescent brains are still developing through the mid-20s, making them genuinely vulnerable to cannabis’s effects on cognition and motivation in ways adults are not. We need to stop pretending that market forces alone will protect young people from a product that’s now 3 to 4 times more potent than what we studied 20 years ago.”
Clinical Perspective

๐ŸŒฟ California’s struggle to implement robust cannabis regulatory protections for minors reflects a broader challenge facing clinicians who counsel patients on cannabis use in legalization states. While Proposition 64 promised strict controls on marketing and sales to youth, enforcement gaps and industry growth have created a landscape where adolescents face increasing access and sophisticated product marketing, potentially undermining public health goals. The disconnect between regulatory intent and real-world implementation complicates the clinical picture, as providers cannot reliably assume that state-level protections are effectively preventing youth exposure or use. When taking substance use histories from adolescent patients, clinicians should recognize that marketing restrictions may be less effective than voters intended, that potency and product diversity continue to expand, and that peer and social access may outpace regulatory controls. A practical approach involves proactively screening youth for cannabis exposure regardless of state regulations, providing evidence-based counseling on neurodevelopmental risks during critical brain development periods,

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