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Exploring consumer preferences for cannabis edible products to support public health policy: A discrete choice experiment
by
Bishop, Lisa
, Johnston, Karissa
, Najafizada, Maisam
, Coombs, Michael
, Donnan, Jennifer
in
Accident prevention
/ Adult
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Canada
/ Cannabis
/ Cannabis - chemistry
/ Choice Behavior
/ Consumer Behavior
/ Consumer preferences
/ Consumers
/ Dronabinol
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Health Policy
/ Humans
/ Ingestion
/ Licenses
/ Male
/ Marijuana
/ Marketing research
/ Medical policy
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ People and places
/ Product testing
/ Public Health
/ Public safety
/ Safety and security measures
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Tetrahydrocannabinol
/ THC
/ Vaping
/ Young Adult
2024
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Exploring consumer preferences for cannabis edible products to support public health policy: A discrete choice experiment
by
Bishop, Lisa
, Johnston, Karissa
, Najafizada, Maisam
, Coombs, Michael
, Donnan, Jennifer
in
Accident prevention
/ Adult
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Canada
/ Cannabis
/ Cannabis - chemistry
/ Choice Behavior
/ Consumer Behavior
/ Consumer preferences
/ Consumers
/ Dronabinol
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Health Policy
/ Humans
/ Ingestion
/ Licenses
/ Male
/ Marijuana
/ Marketing research
/ Medical policy
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ People and places
/ Product testing
/ Public Health
/ Public safety
/ Safety and security measures
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Tetrahydrocannabinol
/ THC
/ Vaping
/ Young Adult
2024
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Exploring consumer preferences for cannabis edible products to support public health policy: A discrete choice experiment
by
Bishop, Lisa
, Johnston, Karissa
, Najafizada, Maisam
, Coombs, Michael
, Donnan, Jennifer
in
Accident prevention
/ Adult
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Canada
/ Cannabis
/ Cannabis - chemistry
/ Choice Behavior
/ Consumer Behavior
/ Consumer preferences
/ Consumers
/ Dronabinol
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Health Policy
/ Humans
/ Ingestion
/ Licenses
/ Male
/ Marijuana
/ Marketing research
/ Medical policy
/ Medical research
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Middle Aged
/ People and places
/ Product testing
/ Public Health
/ Public safety
/ Safety and security measures
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Tetrahydrocannabinol
/ THC
/ Vaping
/ Young Adult
2024
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Exploring consumer preferences for cannabis edible products to support public health policy: A discrete choice experiment
Journal Article
Exploring consumer preferences for cannabis edible products to support public health policy: A discrete choice experiment
2024
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Overview
In October 2019, cannabis edibles were legalized for sale in Canada for non-medical use. This move was intended to improve public safety by regulating contents (including a maximum 10 mg tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) per package) and packaging to prevent accidental ingestion or over consumption. This study aimed to explore consumer preferences for cannabis edibles to inform cannabis policy.
We explored the relative importance and trade-offs consumers make for attributes of cannabis edibles using a discrete choice experiment. Attributes included type of edible, price, THC content, cannabis taste, package information, product consistency, product recommendations, and Health Canada regulation. Participants lived in Canada, were 19 years of age or older, and purchased a cannabis edible in the last 12 months. A multinomial logit (MNL) model was used for the base model, and latent class analysis to assess preference sub-groups. This study was approved by the institutional ethics committee.
Among 684 participants, the MNL model showed that potency was the most relevant attribute, followed by edible type. A two-group latent class model revealed two very distinct preference patterns. Preferences for group 1 (~65% of sample) were driven primarily by edible type, while for group 2 (~35% of sample) were driven almost entirely by THC potency.
This study found that consumer preferences for ~65% of consumers of cannabis edibles are being met through regulated channels. The remaining ~35% are driven by THC potency at levels that are not currently available on the licensed market. Attracting this market segment will require reviewing the risks and benefits of restricting THC package content.
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