Palo Alto, CA: A growing percentage of those ages 18 and older have consumed CBD products, according to nationwide survey data published in The Journal of Cannabis Research.
Investigators at Stanford University and the University of California at San Diego surveyed a nationally representative sample of adults regarding their use of CBD, as well as other plant-derived or synthetic cannabinoids.
More than 35 percent of those surveyed acknowledged having consumed CBD, with respondents indicating that they primarily used it to mitigate pain, relieve anxiety, or improve sleep. Fewer than five percent of respondents acknowledged having consumed products containing the plant cannabinoids CBN (cannabinol) or CBG (cannabigerol).
Nearly eight percent of respondents acknowledged having used delta-8-THC products. Most respondents said they did so primarily for recreational purposes. (Elevated quantities of delta-8 THC in commercially available products are typically the result of a chemical synthesis during which manufacturers convert hemp-derived CBD to delta-8 THC.) Fewer than two percent of respondents said that they had ever tried the synthetic novel cannabinoid HHC (hexahydrocannabinol). Both products are mood-altering.
“A considerable proportion of US adults have ever used cannabinoid products, especially CBD and delta-8 THC,” the study’s authors concluded. Pain, anxiety, insomnia and arthralgia [are] common medical reasons for use across the different cannabinoids assessed. These differences underscore the complexity of the derived cannabinoid product landscape and the diverse motivations driving their use.”
Consumers are more likely to use delta-8-THC products in jurisdictions where cannabis remains legally unavailable. Neither commercially available delta-8-THC nor HHC products are subject to regulatory testing for purity or potency.
Full text of the study, “Prevalence and reasons for using cannabidiol, delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol, cannabinol, cannabigerol, and hexahydrocannabinol among US adults,” appears in The Journal of Cannabis Research. Additional information is available from the NORML Fact Sheet, ‘NORML’s Guide to Delta-8 THC and Other Novel Cannabinoids.’
