News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Column: Hemp Claims Can't Be Confirmed |
Title: | US FL: Column: Hemp Claims Can't Be Confirmed |
Published On: | 2000-02-04 |
Source: | Tampa Tribune (FL) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 04:33:09 |
HEMP CLAIMS CAN'T BE CONFIRMED
Dear Paula: Several cosmetic lines have products that claim they contain
hemp, which somehow is supposed to be beneficial for hair and skin. I'm
skeptical, but figure you would be the one to find out if this is just
another cosmetic industry gimmick. -- Annette, via e-mail
Dear Annette: Dr. Hugh Davis, acting head of microbiology and cosmetics at
Health Canada, told me he is concerned about the use of hemp in cosmetics.
Hemp contains tetrahydrocannabinol, the same active ingredient found in
marijuana.
Davis has been looking at studies on hemp and has found research showing
hemp is accumulative in the body because of its long half-life and has the
same adverse physiological (but not hallucinatory) effects that smoking
marijuana does. One study purports that cannabinoids may postpone puberty.
There are 60 known cannabinoids, only three of which have been widely
studied. This means that we don't know what the other 57 components
potentially could do to hurt your body when they are in a cream or shampoo.
Davis has been in communication with John Bailey (his counterpart at the
FDA in the United States) and says U.S. officials are as concerned with
this issue as they are in Canada, but that there is no definitive
information one way or the other.
There is definitely no research showing its superior benefit for skin.
Write to Paula Begoun at 13075 Gateway Drive, Suite 160, Seattle, WA 98168
or visit: www.cosmeticscop.com.
Dear Paula: Several cosmetic lines have products that claim they contain
hemp, which somehow is supposed to be beneficial for hair and skin. I'm
skeptical, but figure you would be the one to find out if this is just
another cosmetic industry gimmick. -- Annette, via e-mail
Dear Annette: Dr. Hugh Davis, acting head of microbiology and cosmetics at
Health Canada, told me he is concerned about the use of hemp in cosmetics.
Hemp contains tetrahydrocannabinol, the same active ingredient found in
marijuana.
Davis has been looking at studies on hemp and has found research showing
hemp is accumulative in the body because of its long half-life and has the
same adverse physiological (but not hallucinatory) effects that smoking
marijuana does. One study purports that cannabinoids may postpone puberty.
There are 60 known cannabinoids, only three of which have been widely
studied. This means that we don't know what the other 57 components
potentially could do to hurt your body when they are in a cream or shampoo.
Davis has been in communication with John Bailey (his counterpart at the
FDA in the United States) and says U.S. officials are as concerned with
this issue as they are in Canada, but that there is no definitive
information one way or the other.
There is definitely no research showing its superior benefit for skin.
Write to Paula Begoun at 13075 Gateway Drive, Suite 160, Seattle, WA 98168
or visit: www.cosmeticscop.com.
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