CBD cigarette

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A CBD cigarette is a cigarette made with hemp instead of purely tobacco, containing cannabidiol (CBD) but a negligible amount of psychoactive tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). The effectsTemplate:Fix/category[clarify] typically last between 2–3 hours and can take anywhere from seconds to several minutes to set in, making it one of the fastest methods to feel the effects of cannabidiol.[1]

As of 2022, CBD cigarettes will be at the Swiss supermarket chain Coop.[2] Swiss law allows the sale of products containing less than 1% THC, contrasted with laws elsewhere in Europe limiting THC to 0.2%.[3]

US law and regulation following the 2018 Farm Bill allows the sale of hemp products containing less than 0.3% THC on a dry weight, post-decarboxylation basis.[4] Many vendors are positioning CBD cigarettes as an alternative to tobacco cigarettes,[5] which contain physically addictive nicotine. Most, or nearly all, CBD cigarettes do not contain tobacco—instead they are usually made with CBD hemp flowers which possess low amounts of the main psychoactive part of cannabis, tetrahydrocannabinol, commonly known as THC.[6]

References

  1. "How to use CBD & Cannabis". www.projectcbd.org. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  2. "Cannabis Cigarettes Soon Available at Coop". LeNews.ch. 13 July 2017.
  3. "Could a legal quirk bring cannabis tourism to Switzerland?". The Telegraph.
  4. "Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018" (PDF). senate.gov.
  5. Hindocha, Chandni; Freeman, Tom P.; Grabski, Meryem; Stroud, Jack B.; Crudgington, Holly; Davies, Alan C.; Das, Ravi K.; Lawn, William; Morgan, Celia J. A.; Curran, H. Valerie (2018). "Cannabidiol reverses attentional bias to cigarette cues in a human experimental model of tobacco withdrawal". Addiction. 113 (9): 1696–1705. doi:10.1111/add.14243. PMC 6099309. PMID 29714034.
  6. "Aspen Valley: CBD Flower Has Gone Mainstream". Rolling Stone. 2018-11-29.