接受处方类阿片、大麻或其他治疗的慢性疼痛患者获得护理的机会

M. Bicket, Elizabeth M Stone, Kayla N. Tormohlen, Reekarl Pierre, Emma E. McGinty
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摘要

慢性非癌症疼痛治疗的变化导致阿片类药物处方的减少和医用大麻供应的增加,尽管联邦禁止使用医用大麻。患者可能会因为使用这些治疗方法而在与医生建立新的治疗关系时面临障碍。我们根据阿片类处方、大麻或其他疼痛治疗方法的使用情况,比较了医生接受患者的意愿。本研究对 36 个州和特区的现行医用大麻计划进行了调查,调查对象是在 2023 年 7 月 13 日至 8 月 4 日期间治疗慢性非癌症疼痛患者的医生。在 1,000 名受访医生(34.5% 为女性,63.2% 为白人,78.1% 为初级保健医生)中,852 人表示接受了新的慢性疼痛患者。在接受新的慢性疼痛患者的医生中,表示不接受服用处方阿片类药物(20.0%)或大麻(12.7%)的新患者的医生多于不接受服用非阿片类处方止痛药(0.1%)的医生。相比之下,68.1%的医生表示愿意接受每天服用阿片类处方药的新患者。就大麻而言,医生更愿意接受通过医疗计划(81.6%)而非其他渠道(60.2%)获得大麻的新患者。服用处方类阿片的慢性非癌症疼痛患者在获得医疗服务方面受到的限制似乎最大,尽管服用大麻的患者也可能遇到获得服务机会减少的问题。
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Access to Care for Patients with Chronic Pain Receiving Prescription Opioids, Cannabis, or Other Treatments
Changes chronic noncancer pain treatment have led to decreases in prescribing of opioids and increases in the availability of medical cannabis, despite its federal prohibition. Patients may face barriers to establishing new care with a physician based on use of these treatments. We compared physician willingness to accept patients based on prescription opioid, cannabis, or other pain treatment use. This study of 36 states and DC with active medical cannabis programs surveyed physicians who treat patients with chronic noncancer pain between July 13 and August 4, 2023. Of 1,000 physician respondents (34.5% female, 63.2% white, 78.1% primary care), 852 reported accepting new patients with chronic pain. Among those accepting new patients with chronic pain, more physicians reported that they would not accept new patients taking prescription opioids (20.0%) or cannabis (12.7%) than non-opioid prescription analgesics (0.1%). In contrast, 68.1% reported willingness to accept new patients using prescribed opioids on a daily basis. For cannabis, physicians were more likely to accept new patients accessing cannabis through medical programs (81.6%) than from other sources (60.2%). Access to care for persons with chronic noncancer pain appears the most restricted among those taking prescription opioids, though patients taking cannabis may also encounter reduced access.
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