PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Delta-8 THC use highest where marijuana is illegal, study finds

UC San Diego researchers report that more than 19 million U.S. adults have tried delta-8 THC

2025-09-03
(Press-News.org) Researchers from University of California San Diego have found that Delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-8 THC), a psychoactive compound often sold as a legal alternative to marijuana, is most commonly used in states where marijuana use remains illegal and delta-8 THC sales are unregulated. The findings, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, highlight how gaps in cannabis policy may be inadvertently steering people toward less-regulated substances and have allowed manufacturers to evade restrictions placed on marijuana products.

The study’s authors categorized each state based on two key policy types: whether marijuana was permitted for medical or recreational use, and whether delta-8 THC sales were banned, regulated or unregulated. They then analyzed the likelihood of lifetime delta-8 THC use across these groups.

The study was based on a nationally representative survey of 1,523 U.S. adults. Roughly 7.7% of respondents reported using delta-8 THC in their lifetime. But this use was not spread evenly across the country. Adults in states that prohibit all forms of marijuana were about twice as likely (10.9%) to have used delta-8 THC compared to those living in states where adult-use recreational marijuana is legal. Likewise, delta-8 THC use was significantly more common in states with no regulations on its sale (10.5%), compared to states that had taken steps to prohibit (4.5%) or regulate the compound (3.9%). The prevalence of delta-8 THC use was lower among adults in states permitting both medical and nonmedical marijuana (5.5%) and states permitting medical use only (8.5%).

“These findings underscore that people don’t just stop using cannabis when their state bans it. They often shift to alternatives that are easier to access, even if they’re less well-studied or poorly regulated,” said Eric Leas, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant professor at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science at UC San Diego and senior author of the study. Leas is also affiliate faculty at the Qualcomm Institute.

“It’s a classic case of unintended consequences in public policy.”

The policy loophole driving delta-8 THC use

Delta-8 THC is a chemical cousin to delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-9 THC), the primary psychoactive ingredient in marijuana that produces comparable psychotropic effects. Although it occurs naturally in small amounts, most delta-8 THC products are synthesized by chemically converting hemp-derived cannabidiol (CBD), a process that was made more feasible after the 2018 U.S. Farm Bill legalized industrial hemp (defined as cannabis with less than 0.3% delta-9 THC).

Because delta-8 THC can be produced from legally cultivated hemp, many manufacturers argue they can legally make and sell delta-8 THC products as hemp. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued warnings about delta-8 THC’s safety and made a determination that it is not a legal food additive, but federal enforcement has been limited. In the absence of clear federal rules, some states have enacted their own laws, ranging from full bans to no regulation at all. However, most states have made no official determination, leaving delta-8 THC essentially unregulated. Leas has called for this hemp loophole to be closed.

“The numbers in this study confirm a pattern we have seen before in data on delta-8 THC internet searches published in the International Journal of Drug Policy: when safer, regulated access to marijuana is unavailable, people become interested in products that are available, even if they’re riskier,” said Leas. “Providing legal access to cannabis that meets safety standards and disallowing understudied and poorly regulated products like delta-8 THC could be one way to prioritize public health in our cannabis policies.”

Public health concerns and regulatory uncertainty

Unlike regulated marijuana products, which are subject to quality control, dosage limits and labeling requirements in many states, delta-8 THC is often sold in convenience stores and online with little oversight. Some products have been marketed to resemble popular snacks or candies, raising concerns about accidental ingestion, particularly by children. The FDA has received numerous reports of adverse events linked to delta-8 THC and has determined that it does not satisfy the Generally Recognized As Safe standard for food additives and dietary supplements.

“Many people assume that because something is legal, it must be safe,” Leas continued. “We’ve seen rising reports of poisonings and other harmful outcomes tied to delta-8 THC. A regulatory free-for-all only makes that worse.”

This new research provides further evidence that delta-8 THC is serving as a substitute in states where traditional cannabis remains illegal or hard to access. This substitution effect, while perhaps predictable, complicates efforts to control cannabis-related harms. In particular, it suggests that prohibiting marijuana may unintentionally drive consumers toward substances that lack both scientific study and regulatory scrutiny.

What comes next

The study authors suggest that clearer, nationwide standards for delta-8 THC could help mitigate potential harms, especially as Congress considers changes to the federal Farm Bill that may close current legal loopholes. At the same time, they urge further research into how and why people choose delta-8 THC over other products.

“Understanding who uses delta-8 THC, how they’re using it and what their experiences are can help shape smarter policies,” said Leas. “We need to ensure people aren’t caught in a policy vacuum, relying on products that fall outside both safety regulations and scientific understanding.”

Future studies, the researchers say, should explore motivations behind delta-8 THC use and how policies impact behavior over time. For now, Leas believes this study offers a cautionary tale for lawmakers. “We often think banning a product solves the problem. But when the market moves faster than regulation, it can create new problems,” he said. “If we want to reduce harm, we need policies that reflect how people actually behave, not just how we hope they will.”

# # #

Link to full study: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0749379725005045

Additional co-authors on the study include Kevin Yang, M.D., at UC San Diego School of Medicine; Nora Satybaldiyeva, Ph.D., M.P.H., and Wayne Kepner, Ph.D., M.P.H., at Stanford University School of Medicine.

The study was funded, in part, by grant K01DA054303 from the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse. Satybaldiyeva acknowledges salary support from grant 5T32HL161270 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health. Kepner also acknowledges salary support from grant T32DA035165 from the National Institutes On Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.

Leas reports receiving consulting fees from The National Association of Attorneys General and consulting fees and an equity position in the AI company Medeloop, all for work performed outside the context of this manuscript. All other authors report no conflicts of interests.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

2025-09-03
OKLAHOMA CITY – A University of Oklahoma study published Sept. 3 in JAMA Surgery reports that acute normovolemic hemodilution (ANH) – a blood-saving method in which a patient’s blood is collected before going on heart-lung bypass and reinfused near the end of cardiac surgery – remains underused in the United States at 14.7%. Yet the study found that ANH lowered the likelihood of a transfusion by 27%, a decrease in blood use that could cut costs substantially while still protecting patient safety and outcomes. Global demand for cardiac surgery ...

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

2025-09-03
Using the first complete dataset of more than 415 million buildings across 50 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, researchers at the University of Chicago created an unprecedented approach to urban development, down to each street block. The new analysis, published this week in Nature, pinpoints where rapidly developing nations lack “last mile” infrastructure and access to public services. It uses high-resolution data to measure street access to each building across the subcontinent, showing ...

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

2025-09-03
The first complete activity map of the brain has been unveiled by a large international collaboration of neuroscientists. The International Brain Laboratory (IBL) researchers published their findings today in two papers in Nature, revealing insights into how decision-making unfolds across the entire brain in mice at the resolution of single cells. This brain-wide activity map challenges the traditional hierarchical view of information processing in the brain and shows that decision-making is distributed across many regions in a highly coordinated ...

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

2025-09-03
ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Children with sickle cell disease are more likely to have dental problems — but fewer than half of those covered by Michigan Medicaid got dental care in 2022, according to a new study. The findings, led by Michigan Medicine and non-profit RAND Corporation, appear in JAMA Network Open. “Sickle cell disease is known to increase the risk of dental complications in children, which underscores the importance of preventive dental care for this population,” said senior author Sarah Reeves, Ph.D., M.P.H., an associate professor of pediatrics ...

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

2025-09-03
PRINCETON, NJ - Mice turning tiny steering wheels to move shapes on a screen have helped scientists produce the first brain-wide map of decision-making at single-cell resolution in a mammal. For decades, most neuroscience studies have focused on small clusters of cells in isolated brain regions. “But this method is flawed,” said Ilana Witten, Ph.D., a professor of neuroscience at Princeton University and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. “The brain is constantly making decisions during everyday ...

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

2025-09-03
To the point: Small fold – big role: A tissue fold known as the cephalic furrow, an evolutionary novelty that forms between the head and the trunk of fly embryos, plays a mechanical role in stabilizing embryonic tissues during the development of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Combining theory and experiment: Researchers integrated computer simulations with their experiments and showed that the timing and position of cephalic furrow formation are crucial for its function, preventing mechanical instabilities in the embryonic tissues. Evolutionary response ...

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

2025-09-03
A new IIASA-led study for the first time maps safe areas that can practically be used for underground carbon storage, and estimates that using them all would only cut warming by 0.7°C. The result is almost ten times lower than previous estimates of around 6°C, which considered the total global potential for geological storage, including in risky zones, where storing carbon could trigger earthquakes and contaminate drinking water supplies. The researchers say the study shows geological storage is a scarce, finite resource and warn countries must use ...

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

2025-09-03
A new study has revealed a "hidden extinction crisis" in China's flora, showing that habitat decline over the past four decades has sharply increased extinction risks nationwide. The findings, published in One Earth on September 3, suggest that current conservation efforts are failing to keep pace with biodiversity threats. Led by Dr. SHEN Guozhen from the Institute of Botany of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, along with international collaborators, the researchers combined satellite-based land-cover data (1980–2018) with species-composition models to quantify—for ...

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

2025-09-03
“My body is all used up, and I have no will left to live.” Those are the first words of a new essay written by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Associate Professor Tobias Janowitz. They’re the words of his late mother during the final days of her life. “A perceptive woman who survived a childhood shaped by war, malnutrition, and displacement, she was not given to complaint. Her words reflected insight and recognition, not resignation,” Janowitz writes. In a new essay published in the journal Neuron, Janowitz dives into our current understanding of a condition called cachexia. Known as a wasting syndrome, the condition typically occurs ...

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

2025-09-03
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact:   Dan Verello Mount Sinai Press Office 212-241-9200 daniel.verello@mountsinai.org   Journal: Nature Title: Amygdala–liver signaling orchestrates glycemic responses to stress Authors: Sarah Stanley, MBBCh, PhD, Associate Professor, Co-Director, Human Islet and Adenovirus Core, Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism Institute, and The Friedman Brain Institute at Mount Sinai Paul J. Kenny, PhD, Ward-Coleman Professor and Chair of the Nash Family Department of Neuroscience at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Bottom line: This study discovered a circuit in the brain that connects stress with increased ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Efficient ethane separation from natural gas using ZIF-8 slurry

Flying blind: aviation experts call for more pilot training amid poor general aviation safety record

Unraveling the complex relationship between trade openness and carbon emissions in Asia

Towards a new era of global agricultural ecology and environmental science

Durham University scientists pioneer new drone swarm technology

New research reveals insights into linkage between menopause and cardiovascular health

Durham University scientists map stress response system in plants

Weight-loss drug semaglutide reduces cocaine use in rats: Suggests possible first pharmacological treatment for human cocaine dependency

Are probiotics worth the cost to prevent infection after a colon removal surgery?

Mizzou at the forefront of using hydrogen energy safely

New design framework makes it easier to create custom shock-absorbing materials

Ochsner Health honored by AMA for Joy in Medicine

New meta-analysis demonstrates that access to the GeneSight test can significantly improve response and remission rates for patients with depression

UCLA receives $7.1M federal grant to expand psychotherapy treatment for chronic pain

One dose of antibiotic treats early syphilis as well as three doses

Researchers identify single antibody behind life-threatening reaction to common blood thinner

Don’t sweat it: New device detects sweat biomarker at minimal perspiration rate

Not so sweet: Some sugar substitutes linked to faster cognitive decline

Antibody-making cells reveal new function in response to flu infection

CCNY physicists make quantum emitter discovery in diamonds

SwRI and Copeland win R&D 100 Award for innovative oil-free compressor

Loneliness is bad for health and wealth in the U.K.

Oral health treatment in patients due for surgery is associated with significantly lower rates of postoperative pneumonia and shorter hospital stays, per observational study in one Japanese hospital,

Oxygen came late to ocean depths during Paleozoic

Among women suffering hyperemesis (extreme nausea and vomiting) in pregnancy, half report considering terminating their pregnancy, and 9 in 10 have considered having no more children

Loneliness is bad for health and wealth in the UK

Climate change is making rollercoaster harvests the new normal

Misdirected: Increased dementia risk associated with errors of the 'brain’s compass'

Sip smarter: Apple juice effects on oral health are short-lived, study suggests

Vegan dog food provides similar nutrients to meat-based diets, new study finds

[Press-News.org] Delta-8 THC use highest where marijuana is illegal, study finds
UC San Diego researchers report that more than 19 million U.S. adults have tried delta-8 THC