Sznitman Sharon R
School of Public Health, University of Haifa, Eshkol Building, Room 705, Mount Carmel 3190501, Haifa, Israel.
Int J Drug Policy. 2017 Apr;42:15-21. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2016.11.010. Epub 2017 Jan 18.
This study aims to gain a more nuanced perspective on the differences between recreationally and medically motivated cannabis use by distinguishing between people who use cannabis for recreational purposes, unlicensed and licensed medical users.
Data collection was conducted online from a convenience sample of 1479 Israeli cannabis users. Multinomial regression analysis compared unlicensed medical users (38%) with recreational (42%) and licensed medical (5.6%) users in terms of sociodemographics, mode, frequency and problematic cannabis use.
There were more variables distinguishing unlicensed from licensed users than there were distinguishing features between unlicensed and recreational users. Recreational users were more likely to be male, less likely to eat cannabis, to use cannabis frequently and to use alone and before midday than unlicensed users. Licensed users were older than unlicensed users, they reported less hours feeling stoned, less cannabis use problems and they were more likely to report cannabis use patterns analogous of medication administration for chronic problems (frequent use, vaping, use alone and use before midday).
This study suggests that a sizable proportion of cannabis users in Israel self-prescribe cannabis and that licensed medical cannabis users differ from unlicensed users. This is, in turn, suggestive of a rigorous medicalized cannabis program that does not function as a backdoor for legal access to recreational use. However, due to methodological limitations this conclusion is only suggestive. The most meaningful differences across recreational, unlicensed and licensed users were mode and patterns of use rather than cannabis use problems. Current screening tools for cannabis use problems may, however, not be well suited to assess such problems in medically motivated users. Indeed, when screening for problematic cannabis use there is a need for a more careful consideration of whether or not cannabis use is medically motivated.
本研究旨在通过区分出于娱乐目的使用大麻的人群、未经许可和获得许可的医用大麻使用者,更细致地了解出于娱乐和医疗目的使用大麻之间的差异。
通过在线方式从1479名以色列大麻使用者的便利样本中收集数据。多项回归分析比较了未经许可的医用大麻使用者(38%)与娱乐性使用者(42%)和获得许可的医用大麻使用者(5.6%)在社会人口统计学、使用方式、频率和大麻使用问题方面的差异。
区分未经许可和获得许可使用者的变量比区分未经许可和娱乐性使用者的特征更多。与未经许可的使用者相比,娱乐性使用者更可能为男性,食用大麻的可能性更小,频繁使用大麻的可能性更大,更可能单独使用且在中午之前使用。获得许可的使用者比未经许可的使用者年龄更大,他们报告称处于飘飘然状态的时间更少,大麻使用问题更少,并且他们更可能报告类似于针对慢性问题进行药物治疗的大麻使用模式(频繁使用、吸电子烟、单独使用以及在中午之前使用)。
本研究表明,以色列相当一部分大麻使用者自行开具大麻,并且获得许可的医用大麻使用者与未经许可的使用者不同。这进而表明需要一个严格的大麻医疗项目,该项目不能成为娱乐性大麻合法获取的后门。然而,由于方法学上的局限性,这一结论仅具有启发性。娱乐性、未经许可和获得许可的使用者之间最有意义的差异在于使用方式和模式,而非大麻使用问题。然而,目前用于筛查大麻使用问题的工具可能不太适合评估出于医疗目的使用者的此类问题。事实上,在筛查有问题的大麻使用时,需要更仔细地考虑大麻使用是否出于医疗目的。