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New Zealand reclassifies legal status of CBD

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If a CBD product can be demonstrated to have a positive balance of risk and benefit in terms of safety and effectiveness, it will be approved as meeting national and international standards and can be supplied for legal sale to pharmacies.

Medsafe has taken a step towards facilitating access to cannabidiol by allowing it to be available over-the-counter in pharmacies, despite the widespread availability of

It will be a while before there are medicinal products containing this non-narcotic cannabinoid in New Zealand.

Medsafe reclassified cannabidiol (CBD) from a prescription-only drug to a restricted drug (pharmacists only), following a similar approach with Australia, which made similar changes in December 2020.

Although there are currently no CBD products approved in New Zealand, this change means that from the date of this decision, any low dose CBD product that is approved in the future can be supplied to registered patients over 18 years of age. These are mainly products that can be used to treat minor ailments.

The decision followed Medsafe's careful review of the risk and benefit profile of low-dose cannabidiol and included consultation with healthcare professionals, industry and the public.

Representatives of the New Zealand CBD industry note that the change in classification opens up more opportunities for research into the clinical effectiveness and safety of cannabidiol. This could subsequently create more opportunities for low-dose CBD drugs to be approved.

Until now, the main supply route for CBD into New Zealand has been through medicinal cannabis products, which are not approved by Medsafe but meet the minimum quality standards of the Misuse of Drugs Regulations (Medical Cannabis). This meant that the plant's therapeutic properties could only be accessed by prescription from a registered medical practitioner.

Making these types of changes to the classification means that if a CBD product can be demonstrated to have a positive balance of risk and benefit in terms of safety and effectiveness, it will be approved as meeting national and international standards and can be supplied for legal sale to pharmacies.

Commentary from specialists of the Association “Ukrainian Industrial Hemp”  

Medsafe - New Zealand Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Authority.

In some economically developed countries, there are clearly emerging trends indicating that non-narcotic cannabinoids are gradually being transferred from the category of strictly controlled substances used exclusively in pharmacological preparations to therapeutically active raw materials used as the basis for food, cosmetics, and various types of additives (biologically active, nutritional, etc.).



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