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Comparison of State-Level Regulations for Cannabis Contaminants and Implications for Public Health

Authors :
Laura E. Jameson
Kendra D. Conrow
Dorina V. Pinkhasova
Haleigh L. Boulanger
Hyunji Ha
Negar Jourabchian
Steven A. Johnson
Michael P. Simeone
Iniobong A. Afia
Thomas M. Cahill
Cindy S. Orser
Maxwell C.K. Leung
Source :
Environmental Health Perspectives. 130
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Environmental Health Perspectives, 2022.

Abstract

The presence of contaminants in cannabis presents a potential health hazard to recreational users and susceptible patients with medical conditions. Because of the federally illegal status of cannabis, there are no unified regulatory guidelines mitigating the public health risk of cannabis contaminants.To inform further research and provide solutions to the public health risk of cannabis contaminants at a national level, we examined the current landscape of state-level contaminant regulations, and cannabis contaminants of concern, as well as patient populations susceptible to contaminants.We examined the regulatory documents for medical and recreational cannabis in all legalized U.S. jurisdictions and compiled a complete list of regulated contaminants, namely, pesticides, inorganics, solvents, microbes, and mycotoxins. We data mined the compliance testing records of 5,654 cured flower and 3,760 extract samples that accounted forAs of 18 May 2022, 36 states and the District of Columbia listed a total of 679 cannabis contaminants as regulated in medical or recreational cannabis, including 551 pesticides, 74 solvents, 12 inorganics, 21 microbes, 5 mycotoxins, and 16 other contaminants. Different jurisdictions showed significant variations in regulated contaminants and action levels ranging up to four orders of magnitude. A failure rate of 2.3% was identified for flowers and 9.2% for extracts in the California samples. Insecticides and fungicides were the most prevalent categories of detected contaminants, with boscalid and chlorpyrifos being the most common. The contaminant concentrations fell below the regulatory action levels in many legalized jurisdictions, indicating a higher risk of contaminant exposure. Cannabis use reports indicated usage in several patient populations susceptible to contamination toxicity, including cancer (44,318) and seizure (21,195) patients.Although individual jurisdictions can implement their policies and regulations for legalized cannabis, this study demonstrates the urgent need to mitigate the public health risk of cannabis contamination by introducing national-level guidelines based on conventional risk assessment methodologies and knowledge of patients' susceptibility in medical use. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP11206.

Details

ISSN :
15529924 and 00916765
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Health Perspectives
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....09df913671a4bd0c4ea5d70fa337aab2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp11206