Ageze Daniel, Baird Sara, Marcotte Thomas D, Elashmawy Ahmed, Wong Angela, Dell'Acqua Renee, Rybar Jill, Hacker Sarah, Gold Alice, Shaughnessy Tom, Lanin-Kettering Ilene, Hill Linda L
Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Longevity Science, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA, 92093, USA.
Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research, Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, 220 Dickinson Street, Suite B, San Diego, CA, 92103, USA.
J Cannabis Res. 2025 Jul 12;7(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s42238-025-00304-9.
Implemented in 2018, Proposition 64: The Adult Use of Marijuana Act (Prop 64; passed in 2016) legalized adult recreational cannabis use in California. This analysis of the Impact 64 study aimed to assess knowledge about Prop 64 and attitudes toward cannabis legalization by California residents.
A mixed qualitative and quantitative questionnaire about cannabis and Prop 64 was completed by 4,020 current cannabis users, 523 former users, and 635 non-users who were selected from an initial pool demographically matched to the 2020 California census. Quantitative questions about Prop 64 knowledge and attitudes were selected for this sub-analysis. Chi-squared tests and nominal logistic multivariate analysis were used to assess knowledge and attitudes based on demographic characteristics and cannabis use factors.
Current users had a mean age of 42 years and were 59% male, and more than 90% had heard of Prop 64. The 71% of current users who described themselves as somewhat or very familiar with Prop 64 were more likely to be employed full-time (AOR 1.5, p < 0.001), have no minors in the household (AOR 1.4, p < 0.001), and live in Central California (AOR 1.3, p < 0.001). Awareness of specific regulations of the associated laws was low among current users, including for possession (49%), transportation (41%), and gifting (30%) of cannabis, as well as for age and possession limits. Attitudes were mixed, though current users had more positive attitudes than former and non-users for almost all measures (p < 0.001). Only 30% of current cannabis users, believe cannabis should be legal to use in more public places, and only half of current users felt that Prop 64 made cannabis products and cannabis acquisition safer.
Four years after implementation, knowledge gaps around Prop 64 are widespread. Effective messaging is needed to increase awareness and bridge knowledge gaps, which can ultimately minimize public harm.
2018年实施的第64号提案:《成人使用大麻法案》(第64号提案;2016年通过)使加利福尼亚州成人娱乐用大麻合法化。这项对“影响64”研究的分析旨在评估加利福尼亚州居民对第64号提案的了解程度以及对大麻合法化的态度。
一份关于大麻和第64号提案的定性与定量混合问卷由4020名现用大麻者、523名曾用大麻者和635名非使用者完成,这些人是从最初与2020年加利福尼亚州人口普查人口统计学匹配的人群中挑选出来的。本次子分析选取了关于第64号提案知识和态度的定量问题。使用卡方检验和名义逻辑多元分析来根据人口统计学特征和大麻使用因素评估知识和态度。
现用大麻者的平均年龄为42岁,男性占59%,超过90%的人听说过第64号提案。71%称自己对第64号提案 somewhat或非常熟悉的现用大麻者更有可能是全职工作(优势比1.5,p<0.001),家中没有未成年人(优势比1.4,p<0.001),且居住在加利福尼亚州中部(优势比1.3,p<0.001)。现用大麻者对相关法律具体规定的知晓率较低,包括大麻持有(49%)、运输(41%)和赠送(30%)以及年龄和持有限制方面。态度不一,不过现用大麻者在几乎所有指标上的态度都比曾用大麻者和非使用者更积极(p<0.001)。只有30%的现用大麻者认为大麻在更多公共场所使用应该合法,只有一半的现用大麻者觉得第64号提案使大麻产品和获取大麻更安全。
实施四年后,围绕第64号提案的知识差距广泛存在。需要有效的信息传播来提高认识并弥合知识差距,这最终可以将公共危害降至最低。