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Cannabis Dispensary Staff (“Budtender”) Perspectives on Trustworthiness of Social Media Information: A Qualitative Study.

CED Clinical Relevance  #56Monitored Relevance  Early-stage or contextual signal requiring further evidence before action.
🔬 Evidence Watch  |  CED Clinic
Medical CannabisPatient EducationDispensary GuidanceInformation QualityClinical Practice
Journal Cannabis (Albuquerque, N.M.)
Study Type Clinical Study
Population Human participants
Why This Matters

This study reveals a critical gap between patient information-seeking behavior and the quality of cannabis guidance available at the point of purchase. With patients increasingly relying on dispensary staff recommendations in the absence of physician guidance, understanding how budtenders evaluate information sources directly impacts patient safety and therapeutic outcomes.

Clinical Summary

This qualitative study interviewed San Francisco Bay Area budtenders to examine their perspectives on social media as an information source for cannabis recommendations. The research found that dispensary staff were highly skeptical of social media content, particularly commercial posts, and expressed frustration with inconsistent platform moderation policies. Instead, budtenders preferred offline sources and experiential knowledge when making product recommendations to customers. The study highlights the information quality challenges facing both dispensary staff and consumers in an evolving cannabis marketplace that outpaces traditional medical and scientific information sources.

Dr. Caplan’s Take

“This confirms what I observe clinicallyโ€”patients are getting cannabis advice from well-intentioned but often inadequately trained dispensary staff who themselves struggle with information quality. The budtenders’ skepticism of social media is actually reassuring, but their reliance on anecdotal experience over clinical evidence remains problematic for medical cannabis patients.”

Clinical Perspective
🧠 Clinicians should recognize that patients are likely receiving cannabis guidance from dispensary staff who lack medical training and rely heavily on experiential rather than evidence-based information. This underscores the need for physician engagement in cannabis medicine and the development of clinical decision-support tools that can bridge the gap between dispensary recommendations and medical care.

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FAQ

Should I trust cannabis information I find on social media platforms?

According to this study, cannabis dispensary professionals are highly skeptical of social media content about cannabis, particularly commercially-oriented posts. They find social media unreliable due to inconsistent content moderation and prefer offline sources and direct product experience for making recommendations.

How do budtenders evaluate cannabis information for reliability?

Budtenders prioritize first-hand and second-hand experiences with cannabis products over online sources when assessing information quality. They rely heavily on offline information sources and established professional relationships rather than digital platforms for guidance.

What should patients know about getting cannabis advice from dispensary staff?

Dispensary staff (“budtenders”) base their recommendations primarily on personal and colleague experiences rather than formal medical training or peer-reviewed research. While they can provide valuable insights about product characteristics, patients should consult healthcare providers for medical cannabis decisions.

Why might there be gaps in reliable cannabis information available to consumers?

Scientific and medical research is being outpaced by the rapidly expanding cannabis marketplace, creating uncertainty about safety and efficacy of emerging products. This information gap forces consumers to rely on dispensary staff and online sources that may lack rigorous scientific backing.

How can healthcare providers help patients navigate cannabis information quality?

Providers should educate patients about the limitations of social media and dispensary-based cannabis information while directing them to evidence-based medical resources. Open communication about cannabis use allows providers to offer more reliable guidance than what patients might receive from commercial sources.






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