Cannabis clinical trials have historically suffered from poor diversity, limiting generalizability of findings across different populations. Since cannabis response can vary significantly by genetics, metabolism, and social determinants of health, homogeneous trial populations may miss clinically relevant differences in efficacy and safety profiles.
The article discusses integrating behavioral science principles into clinical trial design to improve diversity and representation. For cannabis research, this is particularly relevant given that cannabis use patterns, stigma responses, and therapeutic outcomes can vary substantially across demographic groups. Current cannabis trials often underrepresent minority populations, older adults, and patients with complex comorbidities, potentially limiting the external validity of results for real-world clinical populations.
“I’ve seen firsthand how cannabis response varies dramatically across my patient population — what works for a 25-year-old white male with anxiety may be completely inappropriate for a 65-year-old Black woman with the same condition. We need trials that actually reflect the diversity of patients we treat.”
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