Knowledge Cannabis pilot study in the Basel region shows success according to organizers

SDA

2.7.2024 - 08:49

In the cannabis pilot study in the canton of Basel Landschaft, participants can legally obtain cannabis products. (archive image)
In the cannabis pilot study in the canton of Basel Landschaft, participants can legally obtain cannabis products. (archive image)
Keystone

The legal distribution of cannabis has led to lower-risk cannabis consumption in a pilot study in the canton of Basel-Landschaft. According to an initial interim evaluation of the trial, participants consumed more low-risk cannabis products such as vapes and edibles.

Keystone-SDA

Sales of these products have risen sharply since the start of the study, the study organizers announced on Tuesday. This development may be due to the targeted specialist advice on less harmful forms of consumption than smoking.

The average consumption of flower and hashish per participant was initially stable. However, a slight decrease was recorded around four months after the start of the study.

For the study in the canton of Baselland, 4000 people were allowed to buy cannabis legally. The Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) approved the study in October 2023.

So far, there are around 700 participants, around 80 percent of whom are men. 5,000 study products have already been handed out at the dispensary in Allschwil. These included around 35 kilograms of cannabis flowers and four kilograms of hash.

More expensive than illegal cannabis products

According to the study participants, they have consumed significantly less cannabis from illegal sources since the start of the study. On average, they obtained cannabis from the illegal market on around twenty days a month before the study began. This figure fell to ten days. According to the press release, the prices for cannabis flowers are currently between eight and twelve francs per gram. Price adjustments are planned in order to successfully compete with the illegal market.

The "Grashaus Projects" study is organized by the German Sanity Group and carried out by the Swiss Institute for Addiction and Health Research (ISGF).