“Smoking weed it gets you over the hump”: Cannabis co-use as a facilitator of decreased opioid use among people who inject drugs in Los Angeles, California

Siddhi S. Ganesh , Erin E. Gould , Bradley T. Conner , Jimi Huh , Rachel Carmen Ceasar , Ricky N. Bluthenthal
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Abstract

Introduction

Opioid overdose mortality rates have surged dramatically in the last decade due largely to fentanyl in the illicit US drug supply. As of June 2024, 38 states, three territories, namely US Virgin Islands, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, and the District of Columbia, allow the medical use of cannabis products. However, there remains limited qualitative community-based evidence on the role of cannabis co-use among opioid using and injecting populations. In this study, we present data from people who inject drugs (PWID)’s co-use of cannabis-opioid.

Methods

We conducted 30 one-on-one semi-structured interviews with PWID from July 2021 to April 2022 at two community sites in Los Angeles, CA, near a syringe service program and a methadone clinic. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. We used constructivist grounded theory methods for identifying and comparing the emerging themes that appeared across transcripts to construct a conceptual explanation of how PWID co-used cannabis and opioids. Participant inclusion criteria included injection drug use, opioid and cannabis use, English fluency, and age 18+ years.

Results

PWID described that cannabis co-use assisted in developing patterns of reduced opioid use in a number of ways: 1) maintain opioid cessation and/or adhere to opioid use disorder treatment by managing cessation-specific symptoms, 2) manage symptoms of opioid withdrawal episodically and, 3) decrease opioid use due to low barrier accessibility of cannabis.

Discussion

Participants reported myriad benefits of opioid and cannabis co-use for reducing patterns of opioid use. These findings have two major harm reduction implications for PWID: 1) the distribution of cannabis via low threshold peer programming and interventions can facilitate changes in opioid use patterns and 2) access to cannabis co-use, potentially alongside existing Medication for Opioid Use Disorder, in treatment settings may improve efficacy of uptake and treatment outcomes and goals for individual PWID.

"吸大麻能让你克服困难":在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶注射毒品的人群中共同使用大麻是减少阿片类药物使用的促进因素
导言在过去十年中,阿片类药物过量死亡率急剧上升,这主要是由于美国非法药物供应中的芬太尼所致。截至 2024 年 6 月,美国有 38 个州、三个地区(即美属维尔京群岛、关岛和北马里亚纳群岛)以及哥伦比亚特区允许医疗使用大麻产品。然而,关于吸食和注射类阿片人群共同使用大麻的作用,基于社区的定性证据仍然有限。在本研究中,我们提供了注射吸毒者(PWID)共同使用大麻和阿片类药物的数据。方法我们于 2021 年 7 月至 2022 年 4 月在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市的两个社区地点(靠近注射器服务计划和美沙酮诊所)对注射吸毒者进行了 30 次一对一的半结构式访谈。我们对访谈进行了录音和转录。我们采用建构主义基础理论方法来识别和比较记录誊本中出现的新主题,从而构建出关于吸毒者如何共同使用大麻和阿片类药物的概念性解释。参与者的纳入标准包括注射吸毒、阿片类药物和大麻的使用、英语流利程度以及 18 岁以上:讨论参与者报告了共同使用阿片和大麻对减少阿片使用模式的多种益处。这些发现对吸毒者有两大减低伤害的影响:1)通过低门槛同伴计划和干预措施分发大麻可促进阿片类药物使用模式的改变;2)在治疗环境中,可能与现有的阿片类药物使用障碍药物一起共同使用大麻,这可能会提高吸毒者接受治疗的效果以及治疗结果和目标。
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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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