| Literature DB >> 34906259 |
Obioha Ukaegbu1, Jared Smith2, David Hall3, Thomas Frain3, Cyrus Abbasian3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cannabidiol (CBD) is now a legal substance in Europe and is available in 'high street shops', usually as CBD oil. However, in the United Kingdom (UK), there is no clear consensus among healthcare professionals and organisations over how to manage CBD use in their patients. This is an important issue as CBD is a constituent of 'medicinal and recreational cannabis' and is gaining support in the scientific literature and lay media for use in physical and mental health problems. Given the aforementioned, this study is an exploration of healthcare professionals' beliefs and attitudes with regard to CBD.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Cannabidiol; Clinical staff; Medical cannabis; United Kingdom
Year: 2021 PMID: 34906259 PMCID: PMC8672615 DOI: 10.1186/s42238-021-00104-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cannabis Res ISSN: 2522-5782
CBD survey attitudinal items
| (i) I am aware of several potential properties for the clinical use of CBD | |
| (ii) CBD reduces the likelihood of psychosis | |
| (iii) CBD has serious side effects | |
| (iv) I have concerns about patients self-medicating with CBD | |
| (v) CBD is easily available to buy in high street shops | |
| (vi) People can become dependent on CBD if used regularly | |
| (vii) CBD should be prescription only | |
| (viii) I would prescribe CBD if it were in the British National Formulary (this question was only for those with a licence to prescribe) |
Staff profile of CBD survey responders (n = 180). Values represent frequencies (percentages)
| Role | |
|---|---|
| Consultant/SAS | 29 (16.1) |
| Nurse | 62 (34.4) |
| CT/GPVTS/FY | 17 (9.4) |
| SpR/ST | 9 (5.0) |
| Other staff with patient contact | 63 (35.0) |
| Experience of working with addictions services/patients | 95 (52.8) |
| Prescribe medications | 58 (32.2) |
| Prescribe medications (and a physician) | 55 (30.5) |
| Proportion of prescribers who are physicians | 55/58 (94.8) |
SAS, Specialty Physicians and Associate Specialist; CT, Core Trainee; GPVTS, General Practice Vocational Training Schemes; FY, Foundation Year Physician; SpR, Specialist Registrar; ST, Specialty Trainee
Attitudes concerning use of cannabidiol (CBD; n = 180). Please note that values represent frequencies (percentages)
| Strongly agree | Agree | Neither agree nor disagree | Disagree | Strongly disagree | Overall % agree | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I am aware of several potential properties for the clinical use of CBD | 21 (11.7) | 80 (44.4) | 39 (21.7) | 28 (15.6) | 12 (6.7) | 101 (56.1) |
| CBD reduces the likelihood of psychosis | 5 (2.8) | 33 (18.3) | 62 (34.4) | 57 (31.7) | 23 (12.8) | 38 (21.1) |
| CBD has dangerous side effects | 14 (7.8) | 38 (21.1) | 81 (45.0) | 39 (21.7) | 8 (4.4) | 52 (28.9) |
| I have concerns about patients self-medicating with CBD | 34 (18.9) | 67 (37.2) | 60 (33.3) | 17 (9.4) | 2 (1.1) | 101 (56.1) |
| CBD is easily available to buy in high street shops | 19 (10.6) | 40 (22.2) | 48 (26.7) | 53 (29.4) | 20 (11.1) | 59 (32.8) |
| People can become dependent on CBD if used regularly | 14 (7.8) | 55 (30.6) | 66 (36.7) | 40 (22.2) | 5 (2.8) | 69 (38.3) |
| CBD should be prescription only | 20 (11.1) | 66 (36.7) | 53 (29.4) | 28 (15.6) | 13 (7.2) | 86 (47.8) |
| I would prescribe CBD if it was in the British National Formulary | 9 (15.5) | 35 (60.3) | 10 (17.2) | 2 (3.4) | 2 (3.4) | 44 (75.9) |
Note: for questionnaire item ‘I would prescribe CBD if it was in the British National Formulary’, only staff who reported prescribing medication were considered; n = 58
Fig. 1Staff attitudes toward the medical use of cannabidiol, by professional role (percentage responding either ‘agree’ or 'strongly agree’). Data labels represent percentages; differences are on chi-square testing; *p < 0.05
Fig. 2Staff attitudes toward the medical use of cannabidiol, by addiction experience (percentage responding either ‘agree’ or 'strongly agree’). Data labels represent percentages; differences are on chi-square testing; **p < 0.01
Fig. 3Staff attitudes toward the medical use of cannabidiol, by ability to prescribe (percentage responding either ‘agree’ or ‘strongly agree’). Data labels represent percentages; differences are on chi-square testing; *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01