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Trends in U.S. Medical Cannabis Registrations, Authorizing Clinicians, and Reasons for Use From 2020 to 2022.

Authors :
Boehnke, Kevin F.
Sinclair, Rachel
Gordon, Felicia
Hosanagar, Avinash
Roehler, Douglas R.
Smith, Tristin
Hoots, Brooke
Source :
Annals of Internal Medicine. Apr2024, Vol. 177 Issue 4, p458-466. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The authors discuss key data regarding licensed medical cannabis use in the United States, including changes in estimates of patients using medical cannabis overall, conditions for which patients obtain medical cannabis licenses, passage of new state-level medical cannabis laws, the number and type of clinicians authorizing medical cannabis use, and shifts in the number of patients based on the presence of nonmedical adult use laws. Visual Abstract. Trends in U.S. Medical Cannabis Registrations, Authorizing Clinicians, and Reasons for Use From 2020 to 2022: The authors discuss key data regarding licensed medical cannabis use in the United States, including changes in estimates of patients using medical cannabis overall, conditions for which patients obtain medical cannabis licenses, passage of new state-level medical cannabis laws, the number and type of clinicians authorizing medical cannabis use, and shifts in the number of patients based on the presence of nonmedical adult use laws. Background: As medical cannabis availability increases, up-to-date trends in medical cannabis licensure can inform clinical policy and care. Objective: To describe current trends in medical cannabis licensure in the United States. Design: Ecological study with repeated measures. Setting: Publicly available state registry data from 2020 to 2022. Participants: People with medical cannabis licenses and clinicians authorizing cannabis licenses in the United States. Measurements: Total patient volume and prevalence per 10 000 persons in the total population, symptoms or conditions qualifying patients for licensure (that is, patient-reported qualifying conditions), and number of authorizing clinicians. Results: In 2022, of 39 jurisdictions allowing medical cannabis use, 34 reported patient numbers, 19 reported patient-reported qualifying conditions, and 29 reported authorizing clinician numbers. Enrolled patients increased 33.3% from 2020 (3 099 096) to 2022 (4 132 098), with a corresponding 23.0% increase in the population prevalence of patients (175.0 per 10 000 in 2020 to 215.2 per 10 000 in 2022). However, 13 of 15 jurisdictions with nonmedical adult-use laws had decreased enrollment from 2020 to 2022. The proportion of patient-reported qualifying conditions with substantial or conclusive evidence of therapeutic value decreased from 70.4% (2020) to 53.8% (2022). Chronic pain was the most common patient-reported qualifying condition in 2022 (48.4%), followed by anxiety (14.2%) and posttraumatic stress disorder (13.0%). In 2022, the United States had 29 500 authorizing clinicians (7.7 per 1000 patients), 53.5% of whom were physicians. The most common specialties reported were internal or family medicine (63.4%), physical medicine and rehabilitation (9.1%), and anesthesia or pain (7.9%). Limitation: Missing data (for example, from California), descriptive analysis, lack of information on individual use patterns, and changing evidence base. Conclusion: Enrollment in medical cannabis programs increased overall but generally decreased in jurisdictions with nonmedical adult-use laws. Use for conditions or symptoms without a strong evidence basis continues to increase. Given these trends, more research is needed to better understand the risks and benefits of medical cannabis. Primary Funding Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00034819
Volume :
177
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Annals of Internal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176636418
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7326/M23-2811