店面和非店面大麻零售商的年龄限制和营销差异。

Cannabis (Albuquerque, N.M.) Pub Date : 2025-02-01 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.26828/cannabis/2024/000234
Joshua U Rhee, Alisa A Padon, Lynn D Silver, Lingling Li, Ethan N K Nguyen, Jacob Paredes, David S Timberlake
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:该研究调查了加州店面和非店面大麻零售商是否遵守在线年龄限制要求,以及网站营销实践是否存在差异。方法:随机抽取134家店面和115家非店面授权零售商的网站。我们测试了零售商类型与网站营销、年龄限制方法和不同购买阶段年龄限制的存在之间的双变量关联。结果:在200个(80.3%)有年龄限制的网站中,182个(91%)使用了无效的方法,即用户点击“是”或“否”来确认其年龄。此外,49个(19.68%)网站在进入时缺乏年龄限制。在结账时需要照片识别的用户中(n = 100, 40.16%), 97%允许用户在上传无关图片后继续。与非店面零售商相比,店面零售商在入店时采用年龄限制、强制账户注册和结账时采用年龄限制的比例显著增加,x2 (1, N = 249) = 7.69, p < 0.01。零售商网站经常显示“清洁”标签(n = 200, 80.32%),其次是积极状态声明(n = 198, 79.52%)、身体健康声明(n = 166, 66.67%)和心理健康声明(n = 146, 58.63%)。店面零售商展示身体健康声明(x2 (1, N = 249) = 7.52, p < 0.01)和健康警告的数量显著高于非店面零售商(x2 (1, N = 249) = 4.13, p = 0.04)。结论:大多数大麻零售商符合年龄限制要求;然而,所采用的方法很容易被规避。青少年容易和不受限制地访问大麻零售商网站可能会增加对大麻的积极态度并鼓励使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Age-Gating and Marketing Differences Between Storefront and Non-Storefront Cannabis Retailers.

Objective: The study investigated whether California storefront and non-storefront cannabis retailers are adhering to online age-gating requirements and whether differences in website marketing practices exist.

Methods: Websites of 134 storefront and 115 non-storefront licensed retailers were randomly selected. Bivariate associations were tested between retailer type and website marketing, age-gating methods, and presence of age-gating at various purchase stages.

Results: Among the 200 (80.3%) websites with age-gating when entering, 182 (91%) employed an ineffective method where users click either "Yes" or "No" to confirm their age. Moreover, 49 (19.68%) websites lacked age-gating when entering. Amongst those requiring photo identification during checkout (n = 100, 40.16%), 97% allowed users to proceed after uploading an irrelevant image. Significantly more storefront retailers employed combined age-gating at entry, mandatory account registration, and age-gating during checkout than non-storefront retailers, X 2 (1, N = 249) = 7.69, p < .01. Retailer websites frequently displayed "clean" labels (n = 200, 80.32%), followed by positive state claims (n = 198, 79.52%), physical health claims (n = 166, 66.67%), and mental health claims (n = 146, 58.63%). Significantly more storefront retailers displayed physical health claims, X 2 (1, N = 249) = 7.52, p < .01, and health warnings than non-storefront retailers, X 2 (1, N = 249) = 4.13, p = .04.

Conclusions: Most cannabis retailers comply with age-gating requirements; however, methods employed are easily circumvented. Youths' easy and unrestricted access to cannabis retailer websites may increase positive attitudes about cannabis and encourage use.

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