Naillon Pierre-Louis, Flaudias Valentin, Brousse Georges, Laporte Catherine, Baker Julien S, Brusseau Valentin, Comptour Aurélie, Zak Marek, Bouillon-Minois Jean-Baptiste, Dutheil Frédéric
Université Clermont Auvergne, CNRS, LaPSCo, CHU Clermont-Ferrand, WittyFit, F-63000 Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Université de Nantes, Laboratoire de Psychologie des Pays de la Loire, LPPL, F-44000 Nantes, France.
Medicines (Basel). 2023 Apr 27;10(5):29. doi: 10.3390/medicines10050029.
: Cannabis use by physicians can be detrimental for them and their patients. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis on the prevalence of cannabis use by medical doctors (MDs)/students. : PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, PsycInfo and ScienceDirect were searched for studies reporting cannabis use in MDs/students. For each frequency of use (lifetime/past year/past month/daily), we stratified a random effect meta-analysis depending on specialties, education level, continents, and periods of time, which were further compared using meta-regressions. : We included 54 studies with a total of 42,936 MDs/students: 20,267 MDs, 20,063 medical students, and 1976 residents. Overall, 37% had used cannabis at least once over their lifetime, 14% over the past year, 8% over the past month and 1.1 per thousand (‱) had a daily use. Medical students had a greater cannabis use than MDs over their lifetime (38% vs. 35%, < 0.001), the past year (24% vs. 5%, < 0.001), and the past month (10% vs. 2%, < 0.05), without significance for daily use (0.5% vs. 0.05%, NS). Insufficient data precluded comparisons among medical specialties. MDs/students from Asian countries seemed to have the lowest cannabis use: 16% over their lifetime, 10% in the past year, 1% in the past month, and 0.4% daily. Regarding periods of time, cannabis use seems to follow a U-shape, with a high use before 1990, followed by a decrease between 1990 and 2005, and a rebound after 2005. Younger and male MDs/students had the highest cannabis use. : If more than a third of MDs tried cannabis at least once in their lifetime, this means its daily use is low but not uncommon (1.1‱). Medical students are the biggest cannabis users. Despite being common worldwide, cannabis use is predominant in the West, with a rebound since 2005 making salient those public health interventions during the early stage of medical studies.
医生使用大麻对他们自身以及患者可能是有害的。我们针对医生(医学博士)/医学生使用大麻的患病率进行了一项系统综述和荟萃分析。在PubMed、Cochrane、Embase、PsycInfo和ScienceDirect数据库中检索了报告医生/医学生使用大麻情况的研究。对于每种使用频率(终生/过去一年/过去一个月/每日),我们根据专业、教育水平、大洲和时间段进行了随机效应荟萃分析,并使用元回归进一步比较。我们纳入了54项研究,共涉及42936名医生/医学生:20267名医学博士、20063名医学生和1976名住院医师。总体而言,37%的人终生至少使用过一次大麻,14%在过去一年使用过,8%在过去一个月使用过,每千分之1.1(‱)的人每日使用。医学生终生使用大麻的比例高于医学博士(38%对35%,<0.001),过去一年(24%对5%,<0.001),以及过去一个月(10%对2%,<0.05),但每日使用情况无显著差异(0.5%对0.05%,无统计学意义)。数据不足无法对医学专业进行比较。来自亚洲国家的医生/医学生使用大麻的比例似乎最低:终生使用比例为16%,过去一年为10%,过去一个月为1%,每日使用为0.4%。关于时间段,大麻使用似乎呈U形,1990年前使用率较高,随后在1990年至2005年期间下降,2005年后反弹。年轻和男性医生/医学生使用大麻的比例最高。如果超过三分之一的医学博士终生至少尝试过一次大麻,这意味着其每日使用率较低但并非罕见(1.1‱)。医学生是使用大麻最多的群体。尽管大麻使用在全球普遍存在,但在西方最为突出,自2005年以来的反弹凸显了医学研究早期阶段的公共卫生干预措施。