"It doesn't make any sense to even try": the disruptive impact of COVID-19's first wave on people with chronic pain using medical cannabis in New York.

Yuval Zolotov, Jacinta Lomba, Megan Ghiroli, Mariya Masyukova, Julia H Arnsten, Joanna L Starrels, Jonathan Ross, Chinazo O Cunningham, Deepika E Slawek
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Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted health care but it is unknown how it impacted the lives of people using medical cannabis for chronic pain.

Objective: To understand the experiences of individuals from the Bronx, NY, who had chronic pain and were certified to use medical cannabis during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: We conducted 1:1 semi-structured qualitative telephone interviews from March through May 2020 with a convenience sample of 14 individuals enrolled in a longitudinal cohort study. We purposively recruited participants with both frequent and infrequent patterns of cannabis use. Interviews addressed the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on daily life, symptoms, medical cannabis purchase, and use. We conducted a thematic analysis, with a codebook approach, to identify and describe prominent themes.

Results: Participants' median age was 49 years, nine were female, four were Hispanic, four were non-Hispanic White, and four were non-Hispanic Black. We identified three themes: (1) disrupted access to health services, (2) disrupted access to medical cannabis due to the pandemic, and (3) mixed impact of chronic pain on social isolation and mental health. Due to increased barriers to health care in general and to medical cannabis specifically, participants reduced medical cannabis use, stopped use, or substituted medical cannabis with unregulated cannabis. Living with chronic pain both prepared participants for the pandemic and made the pandemic more difficult.

Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic amplified pre-existing challenges and barriers to care, including to medical cannabis, among people with chronic pain. Understanding pandemic-era barriers may inform policies in ongoing and future public health emergencies.

Abstract Image

"即使尝试也毫无意义":COVID-19 第一波对纽约使用医用大麻的慢性疼痛患者的破坏性影响。
背景:COVID-19 大流行扰乱了医疗保健,但它对使用医用大麻治疗慢性疼痛的人的生活有何影响尚不得而知:了解纽约布朗克斯区在 COVID-19 大流行的第一波期间获得使用医用大麻资格的慢性疼痛患者的经历:2020 年 3 月至 5 月,我们对参加纵向队列研究的 14 人进行了 1:1 半结构化定性电话访谈。我们有目的地招募了经常和不经常使用大麻的参与者。访谈内容涉及 COVID-19 大流行对日常生活、症状、医用大麻购买和使用的影响。我们采用代码簿方法进行了主题分析,以确定并描述突出的主题:参与者的年龄中位数为 49 岁,9 人为女性,4 人为西班牙裔,4 人为非西班牙裔白人,4 人为非西班牙裔黑人。我们确定了三个主题:(1) 获得医疗服务的途径受阻;(2) 大流行病导致获得医用大麻的途径受阻;(3) 慢性疼痛对社会隔离和心理健康的混合影响。由于获得医疗保健的总体障碍和获得医用大麻的具体障碍增加,参与者减少了医用大麻的使用,停止了使用,或用不受管制的大麻替代医用大麻。生活在慢性疼痛中的参与者既为大流行做好了准备,也使大流行变得更加困难:结论:COVID-19 大流行加剧了慢性疼痛患者在获得护理(包括医用大麻)方面原有的挑战和障碍。了解大流行时期的障碍可为当前和未来的公共卫生突发事件政策提供参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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