Groff Destin, Bollampally Pooja, Buono Frank, Knehans Amy, Spotts Hannah, Bone Curtis
From the College of Medicine, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Penn State Health, Hershey, PA (DG, HS); Department of Population Health Transformation, Harris Health System, Houston, TX (PB); Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT (FB); Harrell Health Sciences Library, Research and Learning Commons, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA (AK); and Department of Family and Community Medicine, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Penn State Health, Hershey, PA (CB).
J Addict Med. 2023;17(1):47-53. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000001027. Epub 2022 Aug 8.
The prevalence of cannabis use among pregnant women is increasing in the United States and places mothers and infants at risk of multiple adverse health outcomes. Given the uncertainty expressed by providers regarding how to approach cannabis use during pregnancy and the growing need for a systematic endeavor to curb use in this population, the aim of this study is to conduct a systematic review of interventions focused on reduction in cannabis use during pregnancy.
We conducted a systematic search of MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Library to identify studies of interventions that target individuals that engaged in cannabis use during pregnancy. We included studies if they were randomized controlled trials, controlled studies, feasibility studies, pilot studies, as well as observational studies. The primary diagnostic outcome of interest is reduction in cannabis use.
We identified 9 studies for inclusion with sample sizes ranging from 15 to 658 pregnant people. Interventions involved brief counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), motivational interviewing (MI), motivational enhancement therapy + cognitive behavioral therapy (MET-CBT), computer-delivered psychotherapy, and psychoeducation. The interventions that were effective primarily used MI, CBT, and/or MET. There was just 1 study that implemented a home intervention and one that explored computer-based psychotherapy.
The studies uncovered through this systematic review suggest that interventions involving CBT and/or MI demonstrate promise for decreasing cannabis use during pregnancy. There is a tremendous need for high-quality studies focused on this population, and the potential for remote and computer-based interventions should be explored more fully.
在美国,孕妇使用大麻的比例正在上升,这使母亲和婴儿面临多种不良健康后果的风险。鉴于医疗服务提供者对如何处理孕期大麻使用问题表示不确定,且越来越需要进行系统性努力来遏制该人群的使用,本研究的目的是对旨在减少孕期大麻使用的干预措施进行系统综述。
我们对MEDLINE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、Web of Science、SCOPUS和Cochrane图书馆进行了系统检索,以识别针对孕期使用大麻个体的干预措施研究。如果研究是随机对照试验、对照研究、可行性研究、试点研究以及观察性研究,我们将其纳入。感兴趣的主要诊断结果是大麻使用的减少。
我们确定了9项纳入研究,样本量从15名到658名孕妇不等。干预措施包括简短咨询、认知行为疗法(CBT)、动机性访谈(MI)、动机增强疗法+认知行为疗法(MET-CBT)、计算机辅助心理治疗和心理教育。有效的干预措施主要使用了MI、CBT和/或MET。只有1项研究实施了家庭干预,1项研究探索了基于计算机的心理治疗。
通过这项系统综述发现的研究表明,涉及CBT和/或MI的干预措施有望减少孕期大麻使用。迫切需要针对该人群的高质量研究,并且应更充分地探索远程和基于计算机的干预措施的潜力。