患者在新西兰治疗性大麻消费的经历

IF 1.3 Q4 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Drugs, habits and social policy Pub Date : 2023-04-28 DOI:10.1108/dhs-12-2022-0049
F. Hutton, G. Noller, Alice McSherry
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本研究旨在探讨人们服用大麻治疗的经验,并收集一些真实世界的证据(RWE)关于他们使用的产品,它们的功效,以及患者经历了哪些积极或消极的影响。本次讨论的重点是大麻对本研究参与者的功效。设计/方法/方法这是一项探索性研究,使用了混合方法:调查和半结构化访谈。这里提供的数据侧重于对五个开放式调查问题的专题分析。从一个有目的的调查样本的结果也简要报告。采访数据不在这里报告。在整个样本(n = 213)中,95.6%的参与者报告说,服用大麻对他们的一些疾病有帮助。在主题分析中,最常见的三个主题是大麻有助于缓解疼痛、睡眠和焦虑。负面影响相对较小,其中一些与不得不从非法市场采购大麻有关,28% (n = 58)的参与者经历了负面影响。一个重要的发现是,49% (n = 76)的人说他们使用处方药的数量减少了(n = 155),显著减少,在某些情况下停止使用处方药。原创性/价值本研究报告了具有临床诊断条件的参与者样本,并增加了RWE关于在新西兰背景下使用大麻治疗目的功效的基础。
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Patients experiences of therapeutic cannabis consumption in New Zealand
Purpose This study aims to explore people’s experiences of taking cannabis therapeutically and to gather some real-world evidence (RWE) about the products they were using, their efficacy and what kinds of positive or negative effect/s patients experienced. The focus of this discussion is the efficacy of cannabis for the participants in this study. Design/methodology/approach This was an exploratory study that used a mixed methods approach: a survey and semi-structured interviews. The data presented here focus on thematic analysis of five of the open-ended survey questions. Results from a purposive survey sample are also briefly reported. Interview data are not reported on here. Findings Across the sample (n = 213), 95.6% of participants reported that taking cannabis helped them with a number of conditions. The most common three themes across the thematic analysis were that cannabis helped with pain relief, sleep and anxiety. Negative effects, some of which related to having to source cannabis from the illicit market, were relatively minor and experienced by 28% (n = 58) of participants. An important finding was that 49% (n = 76) of those who said their use of prescribed medicines had decreased (n = 155), significantly decreased and in some cases stopped their use of prescribed medications. Originality/value This study reports on a sample of participants with clinically diagnosed conditions and adds to the RWE base about the efficacy of using cannabis for therapeutic purposes in the New Zealand context.
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