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UK: Doctor suggested cannabis for pain relief, say one in six

Medical News Today

Wednesday 16 Mar 2005

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Sixteen per cent of people who use cannabis for medical reasons say that their
doctor suggested it, according to research published in the March issue of
IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical Practice.

947 people in the UK reported using cannabis for medical purposes, with more
than a third (35 per cent) saying that they used it six or seven days a week.
The majority (68 per cent) said that it made their symptoms much better.

"The results of our UK survey, including the extent of use and reported
effects, lend support to the further development of safe and effective
medicines based on cannabis" says lead author Dr Mark Ware from McGill
University Health Centre in Montreal, Canada.

People with chronic pain were most likely to use cannabis for medicinal
purposes (25 per cent) followed by patients with multiple sclerosis (22 per
cent), depression (22 per cent) arthritis (21 per cent) and neuropathy (19 per
cent).

Younger people, males and those who had used cannabis recreationally were also
more likely to use it for medicinal reasons.

Key findings included:

-- 73 per cent of respondents used cannabis at least once a week, with 35 per
cent using it six or seven times a week.

-- 62 per cent said a friend, family members of acquaintance had suggested it
and 55 per cent said they had read a book or article about cannabis. 19 per
cent were prior users or had found out about its benefits by accident and 16
per cent said their doctor had suggested it.

-- The majority of users (82 per cent) smoked the drug. Other methods included
eating it (43 per cent) and making cannabis tea (28 per cent).

-- 916 reported average usage levels, with the largest percentage (27 per cent)
using one to two grams per day. Only two per cent used 10 or more grams a day
and seven per cent used five to nine grams a day.

-- 45 per cent of 916 respondents said cannabis worked better than prescribed
medication. 30 per cent of the 872 who answered the question on side effects,
said that prescribed drugs were worse than cannabis and 34 per cent said the
side effects were much worse than cannabis.

-- 77 per cent of 876 respondents said their symptoms returned or got worse
when they stopped using cannabis.

"To our knowledge this is the most extensive survey of medicinal cannabis use
among chronically ill patients conducted to date" says Dr Ware, who conducted
his research with GW Pharmaceuticals in Salisbury, UK.

"We believe that it presents a broad picture of the current state of cannabis
use for medicinal purposes in the UK."

-- The medicinal use of cannabis in the UK: results of a nationwide survey. M A
Ware, McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Canada; H Adam and G W Guy, GW
Pharmaceuticals plc, Salisbury, UK. IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical
Practice, Vol 59, pages 291 to 295 (March 2005).

-- IJCP, the International Journal of Clinical Practice was established in 1946
and is edited by Dr Graham Jackson from Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation
Trust, London, UK. It provides its global audience of clinicians with
high-calibre clinical papers, including original data from clinical
investigations, evidence-based analysis and discussions on the latest clinical
topics. The journal is published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd, part of the
international Blackwell Publishing group.

-- The Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre is a
biomedical and health-care hospital research centre. Located in Montreal,
Canada, the institute is the research arm of the MUHC, a university health
centre affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University. The
institute supports over 500 researchers, nearly 1000 graduate and post-doctoral
students and operates more than 300 laboratories devoted to a broad spectrum of
fundamental and clinical research.



 

 

 

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