Department of Family Medicine, UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California.
Department of Health Policy and Management, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, California.
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 Jun 3;7(6):e2414809. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.14809.
Despite the changing legal status of cannabis and the potential impact on health, few health systems routinely screen for cannabis use, and data on the epidemiology of cannabis use, and especially medical cannabis use among primary care patients, are limited.
To describe the prevalence of, factors associated with, and reasons for past-3 month cannabis use reported by primary care patients.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used electronic health record data from patients aged 18 years and older who had an annual wellness visit between January 2021 and May 2023 from a primary care clinic within a university-based health system in Los Angeles, California.
Factors of interest included age, race and ethnicity, sex, employment status, and neighborhood Area Deprivation Index (ADI).
Cannabis use was assessed using the Alcohol Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST). Patients were also asked about reasons for use, symptoms for which they used cannabis, and mode of use.
Among the 175 734 patients screened, the median (range) age was 47 (18-102) years; 101 657 (58.0%) were female; 25 278 (15.7%) were Asian, 21 971 (13.7%) were Hispanic, and 51 063 (31.7%) were White. Cannabis use was reported by 29 898 (17.0%), with 10 360 (34.7%) having ASSIST scores indicative of moderate to high risk for cannabis use disorder (CUD). Prevalence of cannabis use was higher among male patients than female patients (14 939 [20.0%] vs 14 916 [14.7%]) and younger patients (18-29 years, 7592 [31.0%]; ≥60 years, 4200 [8.5%]), and lower among those who lived in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods (ADI decile 9-10, 189 [13.8%]; ADI decile 1-2, 12 431 [17.4%]). The most common modes of use included edibles (18 201 [61.6%]), smoking (15 256 [51.7%]), and vaporizing (8555 [29.0%]). While 4375 patients who reported using cannabis (15.6%) did so for medical reasons only, 21 986 patients (75.7%) reported using cannabis to manage symptoms including pain (9196 [31.7%]), stress (14 542 [50.2%]), and sleep (16 221 [56.0%]). The median (IQR) number of symptoms managed was 2 (1-4), which was higher among patients who were at moderate to high risk for CUD (4 [2-6] symptoms).
In this study, cannabis use and risk of CUD were common, and more than three-quarters of patients who reported any cannabis use reported doing so to manage a health-related symptom. These findings suggest that integration of information regarding cannabis use for symptom management could help provide a crucial point-of-care opportunity for clinicians to understand their patients' risk for CUD.
尽管大麻的法律地位不断变化,并且可能对健康产生影响,但很少有卫生系统常规筛查大麻的使用情况,关于大麻使用的流行病学,特别是初级保健患者中使用医用大麻的数据,十分有限。
描述初级保健患者报告的过去 3 个月大麻使用的流行率、相关因素和原因。
设计、设置和参与者:这是一项横断面研究,使用了 2021 年 1 月至 2023 年 5 月期间,加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市一所大学附属医院的初级保健诊所,对年龄在 18 岁及以上、每年进行一次健康检查的患者的电子健康记录数据。
感兴趣的因素包括年龄、种族和民族、性别、就业状况和社区剥夺指数(ADI)。
使用酒精物质参与筛查测试(ASSIST)评估大麻的使用情况。患者还被问及使用的原因、使用大麻治疗的症状以及使用方式。
在接受筛查的 175734 名患者中,中位数(范围)年龄为 47(18-102)岁;101657 名(58.0%)为女性;25278 名(15.7%)为亚洲人,21971 名(13.7%)为西班牙裔,51063 名(31.7%)为白人。报告有大麻使用的患者有 29898 名(17.0%),其中 10360 名(34.7%)ASSIST 评分表明大麻使用障碍(CUD)风险为中到高。男性患者比女性患者(14939[20.0%]比 14916[14.7%])和年轻患者(18-29 岁,7592[31.0%];≥60 岁,4200[8.5%])的大麻使用率更高,而居住在最贫困社区的患者(ADI 十分位数 9-10,189[13.8%];ADI 十分位数 1-2,12431[17.4%])的大麻使用率更低。最常见的使用方式包括食用(18201[61.6%])、吸烟(15256[51.7%])和汽化(8555[29.0%])。虽然有 4375 名(15.6%)报告使用大麻仅为医疗目的,但有 21986 名(75.7%)患者报告使用大麻来治疗包括疼痛(9196[31.7%])、压力(14542[50.2%])和睡眠(16221[56.0%])在内的症状。管理症状的中位数(IQR)为 2(1-4),在中到高风险的 CUD 患者中更高(4[2-6]个症状)。
在这项研究中,大麻的使用和 CUD 的风险很常见,超过四分之三报告使用大麻的患者表示使用大麻是为了治疗与健康相关的症状。这些发现表明,整合关于大麻使用以管理症状的信息,可以为临床医生提供一个重要的护理点机会,以了解患者的 CUD 风险。