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Racial, ethnic, and neighborhood socioeconomic disparities in local cannabis retail policy in California.

Authors :
Simard, Bethany J
Padon, Alisa A
Silver, Lynn D
Avalos, Lyndsay A
Soroosh, Aurash J
Young-Wolff, Kelly C
Source :
International Journal of Drug Policy. Sep2024, Vol. 131, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• First study on distribution of cannabis policies using an intersectional approach. • Black residents in privileged areas were most likely to live where retail was allowed. • Equity provisions were rare but most common for Black residents in privileged areas. • Strict ad policies were most common for Latinx and Black residents in poorer areas. • The impact of cannabis policy disparities on public health remains uncertain. Policies governing legal cannabis commerce can vary widely within a U.S. state when local control exists. Disproportionate distribution of policies allowing retail sale, protecting public health, or promoting equity in licensing may contribute to differences in health and economic outcomes between sociodemographic subgroups. This cross-sectional study jointly examined racial, ethnic, and neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics of Californians subject to specific local cannabis policies to identify such disparities. Local laws in effect January 1, 2020, governing retail cannabis sales (bans, expanding buffers from youth-serving sites, restricting advertising, promoting equity in licensing, and capping outlets) were determined for California's 539 jurisdictions. The number of Asian, Black, Latinx, and white residents in socioeconomic advantaged versus disadvantaged neighborhoods (Census block groups) was determined using 2015–2019 American Community Survey data. We estimated proportions of the sociodemographic subpopulations covered by specific policies based on the block group's jurisdiction. To ascertain disparities in coverage proportions were compared across subgroups using Z-tests with the Bonferroni correction. Residents of socioeconomically advantaged neighborhoods were more likely to live in jurisdictions allowing retail cannabis commerce than those in disadvantaged neighborhoods (61.7 % versus 54.8 %). Black residents in advantaged neighborhoods were most likely to live where retailing was allowed (69 %), and white residents in disadvantaged neighborhoods least likely (49 %). Latinx and Black populations from disadvantaged neighborhoods were most likely to live in jurisdictions with stronger advertising restrictions (66 %). Equity in licensing policy was more prevalent for Black residents living in advantaged neighborhoods (57 %) than disadvantaged neighborhoods (49 %). Local cannabis policies potentially protecting public health and social equity are unequally distributed across race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic characteristics in California. Research examining whether differential policy exposure reduces, creates, or perpetuates cannabis-related health and socioeconomic disparities is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09553959
Volume :
131
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Drug Policy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179556601
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104542