This year’s addiction and mental health recovery conference theme is “Building on our Strengths” featuring keynote speakers, workshops, and dialogue opportunities to help create Canada’s National Recovery Capital Assessment Toolkit.
Summarizes the findings from the Accountability for Safe, Quality Care in Bed-Based Addiction Treatment report, which discusses voluntary and regulatory approaches to advance an accountable, accessible and inclusive continuum of safe, quality…
Poster provides an overview of what opioids are, how they are used and the risks associated with using them. Also provides useful tips to reduce harms for people prescribed opioids for medical purposes.
Summarizes the key differences between inhaling and ingesting cannabis. Also includes tips for lower-risk cannabis use.
The Alcohol and Drug Situation in Canada is a series of briefs exploring emerging issues and the evidence behind them, including Traditional Knowledge and lived expertise.
This year’s addiction and mental health recovery conference theme is “Building on our Strengths” featuring keynote speakers, workshops, and dialogue opportunities to help create Canada’s National Recovery Capital Assessment Toolkit.
Presents the results of interviews with individuals who provided harm reduction or medical services at music festivals held in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec between May and July 2017.
Wednesday 4 November 13:00-14:30pm EST.
Examines levels of evidence for using cannabis for various conditions such as chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, multiple sclerosis, seizure disorders, anxiety, PTSD, fibromyalgia and more. It also highlights the conditions for which…
Outlines key considerations for cannabis health products.
This publication has been archived on the CCSA website and was current when it was published. It is available for reference or research purposes.
Illustrates that you can reduce the risks of alcohol by sticking to the limits of the Low-Risk Alcohol Drinking Guidelines. Suggests that “fear of missing out” should apply to fear of not remembering the next morning what you did the night before…