"A glimmer of hope" - Perceptions, barriers, and drivers for medicinal cannabis use amongst Australian and New Zealand people with endometriosis.

IF 2.8 Q2 REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY Reproduction & fertility Pub Date : 2023-10-01 DOI:10.1530/RAF-23-0049
Justin Sinclair, Jason Abbott, Antonina Mikocka-Walus, Cecilia H M Ng, Jerome Sarris, Subhadra Evans, Mike Armour
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Abstract

Previous quantitative research has shown that cannabis use, mostly illicit, is used for symptom management amongst those with endometriosis living in Australia or New Zealand, but the drivers and barriers for use of legal, medicinal cannabis in this population are currently unclear. This study sought to investigate, via online focus-groups, the perceptions, barriers, drivers, and experiences associated with cannabis use, whether legal or illicit, amongst 37 Australians and New Zealanders, aged 18-55, with a medical diagnosis of endometriosis. Previous cannabis usage was not required to participate. Discussion topics included strategies employed to manage symptoms, exploration of current medications, previous use of cannabis for pain management, and interest in using medicinal cannabis as a management strategy. Participants with moderate to severe symptoms of medically diagnosed endometriosis reported inadequacies with their current medical and self-management strategies and were inclined to try medicinal cannabis, both as part of their medical management and as part of a clinical trial. Barriers to medicinal cannabis adoption identified in this cohort included high costs of legal cannabis products, lack of clarity and fairness in current roadside drug testing laws and workplace drug testing policies, concern over the impact of stigma affecting familial, social and workplace life domains, and subsequent judgement and the lack of education/engagement from their medical providers regarding cannabis use. Given the interest in medicinal cannabis and the reported lack of effective symptom management, clinical trials are urgently required to determine the potential role that medicinal cannabis may play in reducing the symptoms of endometriosis.

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“一线希望”——澳大利亚和新西兰子宫内膜异位症患者对药用大麻使用的看法、障碍和驱动因素。
先前的定量研究表明,在澳大利亚或新西兰的子宫内膜异位症患者中,大麻的使用主要是非法的,用于症状管理,但目前尚不清楚在这一人群中使用合法药用大麻的驱动因素和障碍。这项研究试图通过在线焦点小组,调查37名年龄在18-55岁、经医学诊断为子宫内膜异位症的澳大利亚人和新西兰人对大麻使用的看法、障碍、驱动因素和经历,无论是合法还是非法。以前吸食大麻的人不需要参加。讨论主题包括用于管理症状的策略、对当前药物的探索、以前使用大麻进行疼痛管理以及对使用药用大麻作为管理策略的兴趣。患有中度至重度医学诊断子宫内膜异位症症状的参与者报告称,他们目前的医疗和自我管理策略存在不足,并倾向于尝试药用大麻,这既是他们医疗管理的一部分,也是临床试验的一部分。这一群体中发现的药用大麻采用障碍包括合法大麻产品成本高、现行路边毒品检测法和工作场所毒品检测政策缺乏明确性和公平性、对污名化影响家庭、社会和工作场所生活领域的影响的担忧、,以及随后的判断以及医疗服务提供者对大麻使用缺乏教育/参与。鉴于人们对药用大麻的兴趣以及据报道缺乏有效的症状管理,迫切需要进行临床试验,以确定药用大麻在减轻子宫内膜异位症症状方面可能发挥的潜在作用。
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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