Medical cannabis use in Australia seven years after legalisation: findings from the online Cannabis as Medicine Survey 2022 (CAMS-22)

Author:

MILLS LLEWELLYN1,ARNOLD JONATHON C.2,SURAEV ANASTASIA2,ABELEV SARAH V.2,ZHOU CILLA2,ARKELL THOMAS R.3,McGREGOR IAIN S.2,LINTZERIS NICHOLAS1

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney

2. The University of Sydney, Lambert Initiative for Cannabinoid Therapeutics

3. Swinburne University of Technology

Abstract

Abstract Background Cannabis was legalised for medical purposes in 2016. Uptake was initially slow, but since 2019 there has been a large increase in the number of Australians who have been prescribed cannabis for medical reasons. Yet a significant number of consumers continue to treat their medical conditions via illicitly-sourced cannabis. Little is known about how these two groups of medical cannabis consumers differ. Methods The anonymous Cannabis-As-Medicine Survey 2022 (CAMS-22) was available for completion online from December 2022 to April 2023 to adult Australians who had used cannabis to treat a medical condition in the previous year. Recruitment occurred through social media, consumer forums, and medical practices. Questions included demographic characteristics, patterns of cannabis use, conditions treated, and self-rated efficacy. Results Of the 3323 respondents included in these analyses, 2352 {73%) mainly used prescribed medical cannabis, 871 (27%) mainly used illicit. Prescribed users were significantly more likely than illicit users to have had their health condition diagnosed (OR = 1.7, 95%CI: 1.3, 2.2) and to consume their cannabis via oral (OR = 1.9; CI: 1.5, 2.4) or vaporised (OR = 5.2; CI: 4.0, 6.8) routes, and were significantly less likely to have used cannabis non-medically before medical use (OR = 0.6, CI: 0.5, 0.7) and consume cannabis via smoked routes (OR = 0.2, CI: 0.1, 0.2). The most common conditions among both prescribed and illicit users were pain (37%), mental health (36%), and sleep (15%) conditions. Prescribed users were significantly more likely to use cannabis to mainly treat a pain (OR = 1.3; CI: 1.1, 1.5) or sleep condition (OR = 1.4; CI: 1.1, 1.7) and less likely to treat a mental health condition (OR = 0.8; CI: 0.7, 0.9). There were no between-group differences in efficacy with over 96% saying medical cannabis had improved their symptoms. Conclusions From a harm-reduction perspective there is much to recommend prescribed medical cannabis; it tends to be less harmful and has fewer side-effects than illicit and does not risk consumers being exposed to the criminal justice system. Of concern however is the increased willingness of prescribers to prescribe for indications for which there is no evidence of efficacy, such as mental health and sleep conditions.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference34 articles.

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3. ‘More acceptable now’: Medicinal cannabis use rising, passes 1 million prescriptions;Brook S;Sydney Morning Herald,2023

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5. TGA. Medicinal Cannabis: Access Pathways and Patient Access Data. 5th December 2023, Accessed 17th January 2024, https://www.tga.gov.au/products/unapproved-therapeutic-goods/medicinal-cannabis-hub/medicinal-cannabis-access-pathways-and-patient-access-data

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