New York University School of Global Public Health, 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003, USA; Center for Drug Use and HIV | HCV Research, 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003, USA.
New York University School of Global Public Health, 708 Broadway, New York, NY 10003, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022 Jun 1;235:109409. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109409. Epub 2022 Mar 15.
Recent media reports have highlighted copycat/lookalike cannabis edibles as a public health concern. No empirical papers have described this phenomenon.
From May 2020-August 2021, we collected photos of cannabis products via an online survey of cannabis users and through personal contacts. Copycat/lookalike products are defined as those that use the same or similar brand name, logo, and/or imagery as an existing commercial non-cannabis counterpart (CNCC). We assessed each package for similarities with its CNCC with respect to brand name, product name, font, color, flavors, and brand/promotional characters. We examined cannabis content indicators including: THC content per package and serving, cannabis leaf symbol, product warnings, cannabis terms, cannabis motifs, activation time, and guidance on edible use.
We collected photos of 731 cannabis products; 267 (36%) were edibles of which 22 (8%) represented 13 unique copycat/lookalike products. Eight used exact brand/product names as existing CNCCs, and five used similar names. Packages copied or imitated a mean of 3.9 of six features and indicated cannabis content with a mean of 4.1 of eight features. Thirteen packages indicated a mean THC content of 459 mg/package. Four reported THC dose per serving, with a mean dose of 47.5 mg.
Our content analysis highlights three key concerns. First, copycat/lookalike edibles subtly indicate cannabis content while using high fidelity replication or imitation of their CNCC. Second, THC content is high and there were multiple 10 mg THC doses in the equivalent of 1 serving of a CNCC. Third, these products may be attractive to children.
最近的媒体报道强调了模仿大麻食品作为公共卫生关注点的现象。目前还没有实证论文描述过这种现象。
从 2020 年 5 月至 2021 年 8 月,我们通过对大麻使用者的在线调查和个人联系收集了大麻产品的照片。模仿/仿冒产品是指使用与现有商业非大麻产品(CNCC)相同或相似的品牌名称、徽标和/或图像的产品。我们根据品牌名称、产品名称、字体、颜色、口味和品牌/促销角色,评估每个包装与 CNCC 的相似之处。我们检查了包括以下内容的大麻含量指标:每个包装和份量的 THC 含量、大麻叶符号、产品警告、大麻术语、大麻图案、激活时间和食用指导。
我们共收集了 731 种大麻产品的照片,其中 267 种(36%)为可食用产品,其中 22 种(8%)代表 13 种独特的模仿/仿冒产品。其中 8 种使用了与现有 CNCC 完全相同的品牌/产品名称,5 种使用了相似的名称。包装模仿或复制了 6 个特征中的 3.9 个,并用 8 个特征中的 4.1 个表示大麻含量。13 个包装表示平均每个包装的 THC 含量为 459 毫克。有 4 个包装报告了每份量的 THC 剂量,平均剂量为 47.5 毫克。
我们的内容分析突出了三个关键问题。首先,模仿/仿冒的可食用产品在使用高保真度复制或模仿其 CNCC 的同时,微妙地表明了大麻的含量。其次,THC 含量很高,每份 CNCC 的 1 份量中就有多个 10 毫克的 THC 剂量。第三,这些产品可能对儿童有吸引力。