Salter Amber, Cutter Gary, Marrie Ruth Ann, Nichol Kathryn, Steinerman Joshua R, Smith Karry M J, Fox Robert J
UT Southwestern Medical Center (AS), Dallas, TX; The University of Alabama at Birmingham (GC); Max Rady College of Medicine (RAM), Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada; Greenwich Biosciences, Inc. (KN, JRS, KMJS), Carlsbad, CA; and Mellen Center for Multiple Sclerosis (RJF), Cleveland Clinic, OH.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2022 Apr;12(2):102-112. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000001155.
As cannabis products become increasingly accessible across the United States, understanding how patients obtain medical information on cannabis and view the role of their health care provider in providing information is important.
Participants with multiple sclerosis (MS) from the North American Research Committee on Multiple Sclerosis registry completed a supplemental survey on Δ-tetrahydrocannabinol-containing cannabis use between March and April 2020. Participants reported dialogue with health care providers regarding cannabis use, information sources used to make product decisions, and expenditure on cannabis. Findings are reported using descriptive statistics.
Overall, 3,249 participants responded (47% response rate), of whom 31% ever used cannabis and 20% currently used cannabis for MS. To determine presumed cannabis contents, respondents who had ever used cannabis (ever users) most often used dispensary-provided information (39%), word of mouth/dealer/friend (29%), and unregulated product labels (24%). For general information on cannabis for MS, ever users most often used dispensary staff (38%) and friends (32%). The primary source of medical guidance among ever users was most often "nobody or myself" (48%), followed by a dispensary professional (21%); only 12% relied on their MS physician, although 70% had discussed cannabis with their MS physician. Most current users (62%) typically sourced their cannabis from a dispensary. The most common factor in selecting a cannabis product was perceived quality and safety (70%).
Participants most often received information on cannabis for MS from dispensaries, unregulated product labels, and friends; only a small proportion used health care providers. Evidence-based patient and physician education is needed.
随着大麻产品在美国越来越容易获得,了解患者如何获取有关大麻的医学信息以及如何看待其医疗服务提供者在提供信息方面的作用非常重要。
来自北美多发性硬化症研究委员会登记处的多发性硬化症(MS)患者在2020年3月至4月期间完成了一项关于含Δ-四氢大麻酚大麻使用情况的补充调查。参与者报告了与医疗服务提供者就大麻使用情况进行的对话、用于做出产品决策的信息来源以及大麻支出情况。研究结果采用描述性统计方法进行报告。
总体而言,有3249名参与者做出了回应(回应率为47%),其中31%的人曾使用过大麻,20%的人目前因MS使用大麻。为了确定假定的大麻含量,曾使用过大麻的受访者(曾使用者)最常使用药房提供的信息(39%)、口碑/经销商/朋友(29%)以及无监管的产品标签(24%)。对于MS患者使用大麻的一般信息,曾使用者最常咨询药房工作人员(38%)和朋友(32%)。曾使用者中医疗指导的主要来源最常是“无人或自己”(48%),其次是药房专业人员(21%);只有12%的人依赖他们的MS医生,尽管70%的人曾与他们的MS医生讨论过大麻问题。大多数当前使用者(62%)通常从药房获取大麻。选择大麻产品时最常见的因素是感知到的质量和安全性(70%)。
参与者获取MS患者使用大麻的信息最常来自药房、无监管的产品标签和朋友;只有一小部分人利用医疗服务提供者。需要开展基于证据的患者和医生教育。