Why Young Adults Obtain a Medical Marijuana Card: Associations with Health Symptoms and Heaviness of Use.

Justin F Hummer, Rachana Seelam, Eric R Pedersen, Joan S Tucker, David J Klein, Elizabeth J D'Amico
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Abstract

Objective: Prior studies documenting more frequent and problematic use among young adults who have acquired medical marijuana (MM) cards have broadly compared those who use medically to those who use recreationally. Gaining a better picture of how health symptoms and problematic use vary both within those who have a MM card for specific condition domains and between those who do not have a MM card can provide key information for medical practitioners and states interested in adopting or updating MM policies.

Method: The current study categorizes young adults authorized to use MM into three mutually exclusive groups based on endorsements of qualifying conditions: (1) Physical Health only (e.g., AIDS, arthritis, cancer; n = 34); (2) Behavioral Health only (e.g., anxiety, depression, sleep problems; n = 75); and (3) Multiple Conditions (a physical and behavioral health condition; n = 71). Multiple and logistic regression models examined differences across marijuana use, problems, mental health, physical health, and sleep quality for MM condition categories and for those that only use marijuana recreationally (n = 1,015).

Results: After adjusting for socio-demographic factors (age, sex, sexual orientation, educational status, employment status, race/ethnicity, mother's education, prior intervention involvement in youth), MM card holders, particularly those with physical health or multiple health conditions, reported heavier, more frequent, and more problematic and risky marijuana use compared to those using recreationally. Despite this pattern, those in different MM condition categories were generally not found to be more symptomatic in domains of mental or physical health relevant to their respective conditions, compared to different category groups or to those using recreationally.

Conclusions: Findings emphasize the importance of providers conducting a careful assessment of reasons for needing a card, along with use, to reduce potential harms while adding credibility to a medical movement with genuine promise of relief for many medical conditions.

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为什么年轻人要获得医用大麻卡?与健康症状和使用程度的关系。
目的:之前的研究记录了获得医用大麻(MM)卡的年轻成年人使用大麻的频率更高、问题更多的情况,这些研究将医疗使用大麻的人与娱乐使用大麻的人进行了广泛的比较。如果能更好地了解在特定病症领域持有医用大麻卡的人群和未持有医用大麻卡的人群之间的健康症状和问题使用情况有何不同,就能为医疗从业人员和有意采用或更新医用大麻政策的州提供关键信息:本研究根据合格病症的认可情况,将获准使用 MM 的年轻成年人分为三个相互排斥的群体:(1) 仅身体健康(如艾滋病、关节炎、癌症;n = 34);(2) 仅行为健康(如焦虑、抑郁、睡眠问题;n = 75);(3) 多重病症(身体和行为健康病症;n = 71)。多元回归和逻辑回归模型检查了 MM 条件类别和仅娱乐性吸食大麻者(n = 1,015)在吸食大麻、问题、心理健康、身体健康和睡眠质量方面的差异:在对社会人口因素(年龄、性别、性取向、教育状况、就业状况、种族/民族、母亲的教育程度、青少年时期是否参与过干预活动)进行调整后,与娱乐性使用大麻者相比,MM 卡持有者,尤其是那些身体健康或患有多种健康问题的人,报告的大麻使用量更大、更频繁、问题更多和风险更高。尽管存在这种模式,但与不同类别群体或娱乐性吸食者相比,不同MM病症类别的吸食者在与其各自病症相关的精神或身体健康领域普遍没有发现更多症状:研究结果强调,医疗服务提供者在使用医疗卡的同时,还必须对需要医疗卡的原因进行仔细评估,以减少潜在的危害,同时增加医疗运动的可信度,真正有望缓解许多病症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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