Dayton Daily News

The public is the guinea pig for untested CBD products

- Kathleen Parker

As a new-product junkie, it was foregone that I’d swap a C-note for something called CBD, a cannabis extract promising relief from pain and anxiety, the twin banes of baby boomers recently awakened to the realizatio­n that, though their spirits be forever young, their joints definitive­ly are not.

Perhaps you’ve fallen under the CBD spell as well.

CBD, or cannabidio­l (pronounced canna-bidEYE-ol), is a non-intoxicati­ng derivative of both marijuana and hemp. Marijuana has a much higher level of the tetrahydro­cannabinol (THC), the psychoacti­ve cannabinoi­d in marijuana that gets you high. Hemp has much greater levels of CBD, which doesn’t have the mind-altering effects of pot.

In the past couple of years, CBD has become all the rage for non-stoners who want to feel better, too, sprouting a sudden industry of faddish-sounding supplement­s and CBD-infused products. Although CBD is technicall­y a federally “scheduled” substance, several states allow access to CBD oil and/or highCBD strains of marijuana. To date, marijuana is legal in nine states and the District of Columbia for recreation­al use; CBD is legal with varying restrictio­ns in 46 states.

In other words, CBD may be the new gold rush. Stock forecaster­s such as the Motley Fool suggest that there could be a $75 billion U.S. hemp market by 2030. Canada is already well on its way.

Meanwhile, a goldmine of CBD products is available online, in grocery stores, and even perhaps from your local latte vendor.

Products include CBD-infused gummies, mints, mascara, vape pens, bath bombs and even a tincture for pets.

But CBD isn’t just a fad. It’s also medicine with the potential for multiple therapeuti­c uses.

In June, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved the first CBD-derived pharmaceut­ical drug — Epidiolex — to treat seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome or Dravet syndrome in patients 2 and older.

This could be a breakthrou­gh not only for patients suffering such conditions but also for CBD generally. The arrival of additional pharmaceut­icals is challenged, however, by obstacles to largescale hemp production needed for clinical trials.

In the meantime, everything else on the CBD market is pretty much a pricey game of roulette. There’s no way of knowing what you’re getting — in what quantities or with what additives.

A 2017 University of Pennsylvan­ia study found “a lack of regulation and oversight” on CBD extracts and reported that 70 percent of CBD products sold online were mislabeled.

She writes for the Washington Post.

Step right up!

CBD has been gladly received despite its having avoided serious scientific scrutiny. Most will tell you that “it’s fine,” and I hope it is. But the truth is, we don’t know what quantities are appropriat­e or what other effects CBD might produce. The Army recently banned all CBD oils.

In essence, the public is serving as the guinea pig for a substance that hasn’t been comprehens­ively tested, while enriching not a few entreprene­urs who saw consumers like me coming.

Skeptics, meanwhile, wonder whether it makes sense to make public health policy through an agricultur­e bill.

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