Pedersen Eric R, Prince Mark A, Shute Ireland M, Brown Megan E, Gray Bethany, Buch Keegan D, Monterosso John
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California.
Institute for Addiction Science, University of Southern California.
Cannabis. 2025 Jul 15;8(2):51-66. doi: 10.26828/cannabis/2025/000297. eCollection 2025.
Cannabis retail dispensaries have proliferated in the United States in recent years, making it an important time for conducting research. Research is needed to learn more about consumer purchasing behaviors, including the impact of product marketing both inside and outside of retail spaces, and studies are needed to explore how both consumers and retail staff interpret the health benefits and potential risks associated with cannabis products within these environments. Current research on cannabis dispensaries often involves surveys or interviews with customers and dispensary staff outside of dispensary environments, but much can be learned through observational and experimental methods within dispensaries themselves. However, researchers have traditionally relied on surveillance methods, where researchers visit dispensaries to gain a deeper understanding of real-world encounters in these environments. Although these methods provide helpful insights into purchasing and selling behavior, as well as regulatory compliance, these studies are conducted in an uncontrolled environment, as products, messaging, and interactions are specific to the dispensaries in which the research is conducted.
We therefore created a mock cannabis dispensary to offer participants a retail experience that can be controlled and manipulated (e.g., adjustable cannabis product prices, placement of health and risk information in the dispensary, scripted interactions with dispensary staff) to help balance ecological and internal validity and answer questions about purchasing and selling behavior beyond what current methods allow.
We describe the process of developing and stocking the first known mock cannabis dispensary for research purposes, the Cannabis Annex ("The CANNEX"), including interior design, product selection, feedback solicitation from 20 cannabis industry workers, and plans for future research studies within the environment.
By describing our process, we hope to aid researchers in developing their own similar mock dispensaries to continue learning about the health benefits, risks from use, and policy implications of cannabis in an increasingly legal recreational atmosphere.
近年来,大麻零售药房在美国迅速增加,这使得开展相关研究变得尤为重要。我们需要进行研究以更多地了解消费者的购买行为,包括零售店内外产品营销的影响,还需要开展研究来探索消费者和零售员工如何在这些环境中解读大麻产品的健康益处和潜在风险。目前关于大麻药房的研究通常涉及在药房环境之外对顾客和药房员工进行调查或访谈,但通过在药房内部进行观察和实验方法可以了解到更多信息。然而,研究人员传统上依赖于监测方法,即研究人员走访药房以更深入地了解这些环境中的实际情况。尽管这些方法有助于深入了解购买和销售行为以及监管合规情况,但这些研究是在不受控制的环境中进行的,因为产品、信息传递和互动都特定于开展研究的药房。
因此,我们创建了一个模拟大麻药房,为参与者提供一种可以控制和操纵的零售体验(例如,可调整大麻产品价格、在药房内放置健康和风险信息、与药房员工进行脚本化互动),以帮助平衡生态效度和内部效度,并回答当前方法无法解答的有关购买和销售行为的问题。
我们描述了为研究目的开发和储备首个已知模拟大麻药房“大麻附件”(“CANNEX”)的过程,包括室内设计、产品选择、向20名大麻行业工作者征求反馈意见,以及在该环境中开展未来研究的计划。
通过描述我们的过程,我们希望帮助研究人员开发他们自己类似的模拟药房,以便在日益合法的娱乐氛围中继续了解大麻的健康益处、使用风险及政策影响。