Abstract
Background: Medical cannabis has been legally available in Canada since 2001, but its benefits and harms remain uncertain. We explored attitudes toward medical cannabis among family physicians practising in Ontario.
Methods: Between January and October 2019, we conducted a qualitative study of Ontario family physicians using semistructured telephone interviews. We applied thematic analysis to interview transcripts and identified representative quotes.
Results: Eleven physicians agreed to be interviewed, and 3 themes regarding medical cannabis emerged: reluctance to authorize use, concern over harms and lack of practical knowledge. Participants raised concerns about the limited evidence for, and their lack of education regarding, the therapeutic use of cannabis, particularly the harms associated with neurocognitive development, exacerbation of mental illness and drug interactions in older adults. Some participants thought medical cannabis was overly accessible and questioned their role following legalization of recreational cannabis.
Interpretation: Despite the increasing availability of medical cannabis, family physicians expressed reluctance to authorize its use because of lack of knowledge and concerns regarding harms. Family physicians may benefit from guidance and education that address concerns they have surrounding medical cannabis.
Cannabis has been legally available for select medical conditions in Canada since 2001.1 Until recently, however, regulations made access to medical cannabis difficult, limiting its use by patients. On Oct. 17, 2018, the Cannabis Act came into effect, legalizing the sale and use of recreational cannabis across Canada.2 Licensed health care practitioners can provide authorization for patients to acquire medical cannabis, who can then register with Health Canada to produce a limited amount of cannabis for personal use, designate another individual to produce their medical cannabis or acquire cannabis for medical purposes through a licensed producer.3
The number of Canadians authorized to use medical cannabis increased from 23 930 in June 2015 to 377 024 by September 2020.4 The increased use of medical cannabis was likely the result of the easing of regulations,5–7 greater availability given the growing numbers of producers and cannabis clinics8–10 and reduced stigma around the use of cannabis for therapeutic purposes.11–14 One online patient resource now lists 100 medical cannabis clinics in Ontario alone.15
Market data from 2017 to 2019 show that Ontario ranks the highest among all provinces with respect to the amount of medical cannabis sold to clients and the total number of client registrations.16 Patients increasingly seek guidance from physicians regarding the benefits and harms of therapeutic cannabis; however, physicians receive minimal education on cannabis use during their training. Moreover, the evidence for medical cannabis is limited and often conflicting.17,18 For example, the most common indication for medical cannabis is chronic pain.19 The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine concluded that patients treated with cannabis are more likely to have a clinically significant reduction in pain symptoms,19 but the National Institute for Health Care and Excellence has made a strong recommendation against the use of cannabis for chronic pain.20 In 2019, the Canadian Medical Association issued its policy on medical marijuana, stating that although cannabis may offer patients relief when conventional therapies fail, a lack of evidence surrounding the risks and benefits of its use makes it difficult for physicians to advise patients properly.21 The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate attitudes toward medical cannabis among family physicians practising in Ontario.
Methods
Study design
We conducted a descriptive qualitative research study22 and used thematic analysis23 to explore attitudes toward medical cannabis among family physicians. We followed the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist in reporting our findings.24
Participants
We recruited family physicians practising in Ontario, Canada, between January and October 2019. We acquired our participants through snowball sampling.25 One author (J.W.B.) reached out to a family physician to provide contact information of colleagues who held variable views toward medical cannabis. We then asked participating physicians for contact information of colleagues we could approach to interview. This continued until we interviewed enough physicians to achieve saturation of themes and subthemes on perspectives regarding medical cannabis.26 Before being interviewed, each participant was sent an information letter and a consent form outlining the purpose of the study and how confidentiality would be maintained.
Data collection
We interviewed participants using an interview guide with open-ended questions (Appendix 1, available at www.cmajopen.ca/content/9/2/E342/suppl/DC1). We developed and tested our guide in accordance with McGrath and colleagues’ method, which provides 12 recommendations for conducting qualitative research interviews (Appendix 2, available at www.cmajopen.ca/content/9/2/E342/suppl/DC1).27 Furthermore, we consulted qualitative studies on related topics to inform our interview guide28–31 and engaged a family physician to review our interview guide for clarity and completeness.
For each participant, we collected demographic information including sex, age, specialization, years of practice, location of medical school training, location of residency training and site of practice (urban or rural). We also asked participants to state whether they authorized or prescribed medical cannabis.
Three authors (J.Y.N., K.G. or S.U.) conducted phone interviews with participants after they provided their informed consent to be interviewed. All interviews were audio recorded. The lead author (J.Y.N.) has training in qualitative interviewing and provided supervision and training to K.G. and S.U. We stopped recruitment when 3 members of our team (J.Y.N., Y.C. and J.W.B.) agreed that saturation of themes had been achieved. We did not return transcripts to participants, nor did we conduct follow-up interviews. Two authors (K.G. and S.U.) transcribed all interviews verbatim. We ensured participant anonymity by replacing names with an identification number in all transcribed documents and interview notes.
Data analysis
We analyzed all interview data by applying inductive thematic analysis, which has been shown to be effective in investigating and describing a range of experiences.32 We adopted a realist approach whereby we assumed that participants would report truthfully about their beliefs and attitudes.33
Two team members (J.Y.N. and Y.C.) read the interview transcripts and notes several times. Next, the same team members coded and aggregated transcribed text into meaningful themes and subthemes, and labelled constructs. We used an open coding process to establish the primary categories of information from each transcript, independently and in duplicate, and then connected the categories to derive main themes and subthemes. We resolved disagreements by discussion. Based on the codes generated from the analysis, the same 2 reviewers generated a set of theoretical propositions, independently and in duplicate, and achieved consensus. Lastly, all team members reviewed the results and confirmed the main themes and subthemes of our study findings, which were accompanied by supporting quotes. We used both manual coding and NVivo 12 software (QSR International).
Ethics approval
The Hamilton Integrated Research Ethics Board approved our study (project no. 5458).
Results
We contacted a total of 21 family physicians with the intention to stop recruitment once data saturation was achieved; 8 declined to participate, and 2 were found to be ineligible as they were not actively practising. The remaining 11 agreed to participate in our study. Our participants included 6 men and 5 women, who had been in practice for a median of 3.5 (range 1–33) years. Eight attended medical school in Canada, 3 abroad; all had completed their family medicine residency in Canada. One participant held additional specialization in public health and preventive medicine (Table 1). The interview time was about 30 minutes. We reached saturation after interviewing 11 physicians.
Main themes
We identified 3 main themes: reluctance to authorize medical cannabis, concern over harms associated with medical cannabis and lack of knowledge surrounding administration of medical cannabis. Each theme contained 4 subthemes; participant quotes supporting thematic analysis are shown in Table 2.
Reluctance to authorize medical cannabis
For the main theme “reluctance to authorize medical cannabis,” there were 4 subthemes: lack of evidence, indications for therapeutic use, discomfort with therapeutic use and openness to emerging evidence.
Lack of evidence
Eight physicians felt the evidence supporting the use of cannabis for medical purposes was limited. Specifically, they perceived that clinical trials were often poorly designed, followed patients for short time periods and did not inform long-term effects; benefits in trials showing statistical significance were typically modest. Two physicians felt more research on effectiveness was needed before cannabis should be offered to patients. Participants noted evidence gaps regarding cannabis harms among certain populations (i.e., children, emerging adults and older adults), the effects of cannabis on the ability to drive and whether the net benefit-to-harm ratio was favourable for management of mental illness (e.g., posttraumatic stress disorder, anxiety).
Indications for therapeutic use
All participants thought that cannabis could be helpful for managing chronic pain, particularly neuropathic pain. Some physicians perceived a therapeutic role for cannabis in the treatment of anxiety, insomnia or muscle spasticity associated with multiple sclerosis, as well as for relief from chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting and for appetite stimulation. None of the participating physicians chose medical cannabis as the first line of treatment for any condition, and considered it only after other treatment options had failed or by patient request.
Discomfort with therapeutic use of cannabis
Six physicians avoided authorizing medical cannabis altogether, and 2 prescribed synthetic cannabis (i.e., nabilone). Physicians who supported the therapeutic use of cannabis reported insufficient knowledge regarding what cannabis type to use, and how to pursue dosing and optimal monitoring; they preferred instead to refer patients to colleagues with an interest in cannabis.
Openness to emerging evidence
Despite the perceived lack of evidence and reluctance to authorize medical cannabis, 3 participants noted it was important to keep an open mind. They were willing to consider that cannabis may have a role in health care, acknowledged that patients were increasingly asking about medical cannabis and were aware of the need to address their own biases when engaging in discussions.
Harms associated with the use of cannabis
There were 4 subthemes, effect on neurocognitive development, harms in older adults, exacerbation of mental illness and concerns regarding cannabis clinics, in the main theme “harms associated with the use of cannabis.”
Effect on neurocognitive development
Four physicians raised concerns about the effect of cannabis on neurocognitive development and queried whether cannabis use among adolescents and young adults may predispose them to mental illness. Some physicians felt that setting the legal age for use of recreational cannabis at 18 years may give the impression that therapeutic use was safe at this age.
Harms for older adults
Two physicians raised concerns about cannabis use among older adults, including the potential for drug interactions given the common occurrence of polypharmacy in this population. They also raised concerns regarding adverse events associated with cannabis use, such as dizziness and sedation, and how this may affect older patients’ quality of life, ability to drive and capacity to care for themselves.
Exacerbation of mental illness
Three physicians expressed concern over the impact of cannabis use on people with preexisting, or at high risk for, mental illness. Participants noted that cannabis use may exacerbate patients’ symptoms of depression and anxiety or interfere with sleep, and acknowledged evidence to implicate cannabis use in early-onset psychosis among emerging adults.
Concerns regarding cannabis clinics
Although physicians largely referred patients who were interested in pursuing medical cannabis to practices that focused on this therapy, 3 participants raised concerns about the quality of care provided through cannabis clinics. Participants perceived that very few interested patients were denied cannabis, and that most patients were not provided with a detailed explanation of possible harms. One physician highlighted their experience that patients with comorbid mental illnesses, including substance use disorders, found it easy to access medical cannabis though these clinics.
Knowledge about medical cannabis
For the theme “knowledge about medical cannabis,” 4 subthemes emerged during data analysis: inadequate training, continuing education, the physician’s role regarding medical cannabis and recreational versus medical cannabis.
Inadequate training
Five physicians described their knowledge of medical cannabis as insufficient in regard to clinical indications, dosing or monitoring. Older physicians were not exposed to information on medical cannabis in medical school or residency; more recent graduates received some lectures on medical cannabis, but were not well versed on the topic. Our participants thought that acquiring training in the use of medical cannabis required them to seek out online courses and conferences.
Continuing education
Nine physicians expressed an interest in receiving education regarding medical cannabis. When asked what kind of training or education they wished to receive, answers were mixed and often related to their patient population. Some physicians expressed an interest in general topics, such as clinical indications for cannabis and dosing.
Physician’s role regarding medical cannabis
Two physicians expressed frustration regarding their role with medical cannabis because of the atypical nature of the intervention and the limited impact of their involvement. Specifically, medical cannabis does not have to be dispensed by a pharmacist, authorizing cannabis does not lower the cost for patients and physicians cannot control the composition of cannabis used for therapeutic purposes. One physician thought that there was no role for the medical profession after the legalization of cannabis for recreational purposes.
Recreational versus medical cannabis
Six physicians raised the issue of how the legalization of recreational cannabis affected its therapeutic use. Ten participants felt there was merit to preserving a separate stream for medical use, given the higher likelihood of more rigorous regulation for medical cannabis. Specifically, medical cannabis products would be required to be more consistent and adhere to higher safety standards.
Interpretation
Family physicians in our study were reluctant to authorize medical cannabis because of perceptions of limited supporting evidence, uncertainty regarding clinical indications and associated harms. Those willing to consider the use of medical cannabis typically referred interested patients to clinics that focused on this therapy, but were concerned that such clinics may provide cannabis indiscriminately without comprehensive discussion of the possible benefits and harms. One participant questioned whether there remained a role for medical cannabis after the legalization of cannabis for recreational purposes, but most physicians thought that medical cannabis would likely adhere to more rigorous quality standards. This belief requires confirmation through formal study. Participants were largely supportive of both research and continuing education to inform their views on the role of medical cannabis for their patients.
Our findings are similar to other published studies that found physicians lack a consolidated perspective regarding whether cannabis is a medicine and have concerns regarding the limited evidence base for medical cannabis.17–22,29,34,35 Regardless, many participants stressed the importance of keeping an open mind and considering patients’ values and preferences. We found that physicians had multiple concerns associated with patient use of medical cannabis. There is evidence to suggest possible effects on neurocognitive development,36–38 drug interactions (particularly among older users),39–42 exacerbation of mental illness43,44 and insufficient standards and quality of care provided through cannabis clinics.45,46 Physicians thought their training in medical cannabis was lacking, and their interest in continuing medical education in this area is consistent with other surveys.28,29,31,34,47–50 Of note, some observational data have suggested that cannabis may be substituted for prescription medication, including opioids, anxiolytics and benzodiazepines, sedatives and antidepressants;51,52 however, this issue was not raised by our participants.
One of our participants questioned whether physicians should remain involved with medical cannabis after the legalization of recreational use. The Canadian Federation of Medical Students has released a position statement calling for increased cannabis education during medical training.53 The increasing use of cannabis by Canadians suggests that family physicians may have an ongoing role in discussing medical cannabis with interested patients.54 Open discussions may promote shared decision-making and provide opportunities to assist patients in differentiating evidence from hyperbole.55
Our study highlights the importance of addressing the knowledge gaps of family physicians and their concerns surrounding medical cannabis. Research should further investigate the needs of family physicians, as well as medical students and residents, regarding cannabis education.34,56 Increased knowledge of the evidence for the benefits and harms of medical cannabis may improve physician comfort with discussing this topic with interested patients57–59 and reduce patient reliance on cannabis clinics that may not always provide impartial advice.9
Limitations
We interviewed a modest number of physicians to inform our qualitative study; however, we sampled to saturation and only stopped recruiting new participants when no additional themes emerged in our last interview. We used snowball sampling to recruit physicians, which is prone to sampling bias,60 and we only captured the views of physicians practising in urban settings. Few of our participants authorized medical cannabis, and physicians against authorizing medical cannabis may have been overly represented in our sample. Participants may have censored their answers to appear as “good participants” (i.e., social desirability bias); however, many physicians we spoke with were forthcoming regarding their concerns about medical cannabis. Furthermore, no members of our study team had any motivation to encourage positive or negative answers. We did not implement member checking to verify our findings. To ensure the trustworthiness and rigour of our study results, 2 members of our team who are familiar with qualitative research methods conducted open coding and theme generalization, independently and in duplicate.
Conclusion
Family physicians in our study were uncertain of the therapeutic potential of medical cannabis. The exception was the use of medical cannabis for chronic pain, particularly neuropathic pain, for which all participants thought the evidence supported effectiveness. Most physicians did not provide therapeutic cannabis to their patients and expressed uncertainty regarding its harms and appropriate use. Family physicians may benefit from guidance and education that address concerns they have surrounding medical cannabis.
Acknowledgement
The authors gratefully acknowledge Dr. Nghi Phan for assistance in identifying study participants and reviewing the interview guide.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
This article has been peer reviewed.
Contributors: Jeremy Ng and Jason Busse conceptualized and designed the study. Jeremy Ng, Kevin Gilotra, Sana Usman and Yaping Chang collected the data, which Jeremy Ng, Yaping Chang and Jason Busse analyzed. Jeremy Ng drafted the manuscript, which all authors critically revised. All authors approved the final version of the work to be published and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work.
Funding: Jeremy Ng was funded by a Research Scholarship and Entrance Scholarship from the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, Faculty of Health Sciences at McMaster University.
Data sharing: The authors have no further data to share beyond what is provided in the manuscript and appendix files.
Disclaimer: No members of the study team have used medical cannabis or have any financial or intellectual conflicts of interest in this area.
Supplemental information: For reviewer comments and the original submission of this manuscript, please see www.cmajopen.ca/content/9/2/E342/suppl/DC1.
This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original publication is properly cited, the use is noncommercial (i.e., research or educational use), and no modifications or adaptations are made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
References
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