Loveland Reporter-Herald

Partnershi­p studies marijuana use

‘Data is data — good or bad. We’re just looking for informatio­n’

- BY LUCAS HIGH

Researcher­s with the University of Colorado’s CUCHange Cannabis Research team are partnering with a pair of local cannabis companies to study the longterm impacts of marijuana use.

Native Roots Cannabis, which operates dispensari­es throughout the region, including in Boulder and Longmont, will supply participan­ts with marijuana flower, and Wana Brands, a trade name used by Boulder-based Mountain High Products, will supply edibles.

“Our companies are really like-minded in that we care about the community,”

Native Roots director of public affairs Shannon Fender told Bizwest. “We’ve followed what CU has done in this (cannabis research) space for years … and it’s always been an area of interest for us.”

CU’S study, conducted under the supervisio­n of the school’s Center for Health, Neuroscien­ce, Genes and Environmen­t, is expected to run for at least two years and will examine the “psychologi­cal, neurocogni­tive, physiologi­cal, genetic and epigenetic

factors that are linked with health and risk behavior” of cannabis users, according to a joint news release.

Participan­ts, who began being recruited in Februar y, will consume cannabis at home and receive an athome visit from the CUChange Mobile Pharmacolo­gy Laboratory, a van modified with laboratory testing equipment.

Researcher­s will take blood samples and interview participan­ts on subjects related to cognition and behavior.

“In order to obtain the broadest and most comprehens­ive set of data, we include a wide range of types of state market cannabis products in this extensive study,” CUChange co-director L. Cinnamon Bidwell said in a prepared statement.

“We are extremely grateful that organizati­ons like Native Roots and Wana Brands stepped in to help when they saw this need. As most everyone knows, cannabis research is severely limited due to cannabis’ federal status and is still decades behind where it should be,” Bidwell said. “With more states moving toward legalizati­on, it is even more important that we learn everything we can about how cannabis, as it is sold in legal markets, impacts the human body.”

Federal marijuana prohibitio­n puts a “significan­t burden” on companies and institutio­ns in states where marijuana is legal to lead the way in studying the effects of the marijuana plant on human bodies and minds.

“The strength and power of a large research institutio­n like CU backing these studies changes the nature of the type of research that can be done on cannabis,” Wana chief marketing officer Joe Hodas said. “Everyone agrees that more research is better, but we’ve had our hands tied tr ying to do it. Now we don’t.”

While they tout anecdotal evidence suggesting the benefits of cannabis use for the treatment of certain maladies, representa­tives with Native Roots and Wana acknowledg­e that not all conclusion­s drawn by researcher­s are likely to be positive for the industr y.

“Data is data — good or bad,” Hodas said. “We’re just looking for informatio­n.”

Negative results are “something that’s definitely a risk, and something that we’ve talked about internally with our companies,” Fender said. “We want our patients and adult consumers to be educated on the products they’re consuming and to be able to make the best decisions for their health and wellbeing.”

While it is completely apolitical, studies such as CU’S are likely to help destigmati­ze the responsibl­e use of cannabis in parts of the country where the product remains illegal, the industry representa­tives said.

“The group of folks who are anti-cannabis is getting smaller and smaller, and we haven’t seen the massive negative impacts that some people talked about” before Colorado’s legalizati­on in 2014, Fender said. “I’m not sure what will happen in terms of this study changing the national narrative … but I think this just makes for a better informed industry that can make better products.”

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