| For Immediate Release
May 5, 2004
CONTACT: Adam Eidinger 202-232-8997,
202-744-2671
Official
Release at U.S. News Wire
Hemp Sun-Screen Story Wrong
on Drug-Testing
TestPledge Program Assures Consumers
Hemp Products Do Not Cause Positive Drug Tests
CANNON AIR FORCE BASE, NEW MEXICO
— A report first published April 23rd in Mach
Meter: The Online Publication of Cannon Air Force Base
has spread across the Internet through a poorly researched
Associated Press story. It raises unfounded concerns
that sun-screens, tanning lotions, and other personal
care products made with hemp seed oil could cause false
positive drug tests because they contain trace amounts
of THC, the psychoactive ingredient of marijuana. These
concerns are not based on scientific research and contradict
earlier studies on this issue. There are no documented
cases of a person failing a drug test after using hemp
oil or hemp oil containing personal care products, such
as soaps, shampoos, conditioners, moisturizers, tanning
lotions, and sun-screens on the skin.
"Whether you work for the Air Force,
police or local transit authority, Americans who are
subject to workplace drug-testing will never fail a
test because they use a personal care product made with
hemp oil," says David Bronner, Chair of the Hemp
Industries Association's (HIA) Food and Oil Committee
and President of Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps. "Our
soaps are made with hemp oil because it contains an
extraordinary amount of omega 3 and 6 essential fatty
acids that restore and moisturize the skin, and is an
effective natural alternative to chemical-based skin
care ingredients," says Bronner.
The April 2004 issue of the Medical
Review Officer Update, a leading publication serving
drug-testing professionals, addressed the question of
whether hemp oil used on the skin can cause positive
drug tests by referring to a scientific study conducted
by Dr. Gero Leson. Dr. Leson determined that even in
an unrealistic worst-case scenario, in which a person
with highly compromised skin uses pure hemp oil as massage
oil and leaves it on for 24 hours, the amount of THC
potentially absorbed is insignificant compared to the
amount required for producing a positive drug test.
Consequently, the publication's editor, Dr. Swotinsky
advised that "commercial hemp oil skin products
contain minuscule THC concentrations, and use of these
products does not create the right conditions for THC-positive
urine drug test results."
In recent years a handful of people have
alleged that they failed workplace drug tests as a result
of using hemp oil products on the skin. Such allegations
were routinely proven to be false, and there has yet
to be a case in which someone was excused due to use
of a hemp oil personal care product. U.S. hemp companies
voluntarily observe THC limits similar to those adopted
by European nations and Canada. These limits protect
consumers, with a wide margin of safety, who use hemp-content
personal care products and routinely and extensively
consume hemp food products from the risk of a positive
drug test. Please see the hemp industry's voluntary
standards regarding trace THC at www.testpledge.com.
"Concerns reported in the story that
drug-sniffing dogs could target a person wearing hemp
sun block are ridiculous," says Bronner. He adds,
"Thousands of gallons of hemp seed oil are legally
imported into the U.S every year, yet drug sniffing
dogs on the border have never confused these raw materials
with marijuana. News organizations need to do a better
job of reporting the facts about hemp before they do
greater damage to legitimate businesses by airing unfounded
allegations."
Visit www.VoteHemp.com to read court
documents and numerous scientific
studies concerning hemp foods. For more information
or to arrange interviews with representatives of the
hemp industry, please call Adam Eidinger at 202-232-8997.
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