| Literature DB >> 34930765 |
Meredith Vanstone1, Shipra Taneja2, Anuoluwa Popoola2, Janelle Panday2, Devon Greyson2, Robin Lennox2, Sarah D McDonald2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cannabis use among pregnant and lactating people is increasing, despite clinical evidence showing that cannabis use may be associated with low birth weight and childhood developmental deficits. Our objective was to understand why pregnant and lactating people use cannabis and how these motivations change across perinatal stages.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34930765 PMCID: PMC8687504 DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.211236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CMAJ ISSN: 0820-3946 Impact factor: 8.262
Participant demographics
| Variable | No. of participants |
|---|---|
| Pregnant | 30 |
| Lactating | 22 |
| Discussed stage in interview, regarding current or previous child | |
| Prepregnancy | 52 |
| Pregnancy | 52 |
| Lactation | 33 |
| Gender | |
| Female | 51 |
| Nonbinary | 1 |
| Self-identified race | |
| Black | 3 |
| Hispanic | 1 |
| Indian and Guyanese | 1 |
| Indigenous | 7 |
| Jewish | 1 |
| Multiracial | 3 |
| White | 36 |
| Raising child with partner | |
| Yes | 49 |
| Chose not to answer | 2 |
| No | 1 |
| Other children (beyond current pregnancy or breastfed infant) | |
| Yes | 31 |
| No | 21 |
| Place of residence | |
| Rural | 14 |
| Suburban | 17 |
| Urban | 21 |
| Province or territory | |
| British Columbia | 17 |
| Northwest Territories | 1 |
| Alberta | 3 |
| Saskatchewan | 1 |
| Manitoba | 1 |
| Ontario | 21 |
| Quebec | 2 |
| New Brunswick | 1 |
| Nova Scotia | 2 |
| Newfoundland and Labrador | 2 |
| Prince Edward Island | 1 |
| Level of education | |
| Some high school | 2 |
| Completed high school | 5 |
| Some college | 5 |
| Completed college | 17 |
| Some university | 3 |
| Completed university | 12 |
| Postgraduate or professional degree | 8 |
| Employment | |
| Employed full time (includes those currently on leave) | 36 |
| Employed part time | 5 |
| Not employed outside home, by choice | 4 |
| Not employed outside home, not by choice | 7 |
| Age, yr | |
| 19–24 | 2 |
| 25–29 | 12 |
| 30–34 | 25 |
| 35–39 | 11 |
| ≥ 40 | 2 |
Participants were asked to self-identify their race or ethnicity. No categories were imposed on this self-identification.
Categories of pregnant and lactating people’s reasons for using cannabis
| Category | Definition | Indications | Representative quote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensation-seeking | Sometimes known as “recreational” use, whereby participants are using cannabis with a desire to get high or to create an altered state. | Fun, relaxation, to get high, liking the way it feels | “If I know my evening’s going to be relaxed and I have nothing important going on anytime soon, I might have that [cannabis] just to relax and watch funny stuff or you know just to chill in the evenings” (Participant 49). |
| Symptom management | Sometimes known as “therapeutic” use, this is the use of cannabis to treat symptoms that have become problematic or an impediment to daily functioning, either at the advice or under the guidance of a health professional (medically directed symptom management) or on their own (self-directed symptom management). | Depression and anxiety, chronic pain, multiple sclerosis, posttraumatic stress disorder, menstrual cramps, fibromyalgia, eczema, migraines, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, chronic pain for conditions such as Ehlers–Danlos syndrome and hypermobility. | “Cannabis was just kind of always something that I used to sort of just help with the symptoms of anxiety and depression” (Participant 21). |
| Coping | Refers to reasons for use that improve the user’s quality of life, help them cope with what they are facing, or ease difficult or unpleasant conditions. We categorized use as being for coping when the participant’s target of improvement was not a medicalized symptom that impaired functioning, but rather a typical, nonpathologized part of life. | Sleep, stress relief, calm, focus on mundane tasks | “I just had trouble sleeping so when I had a couple puffs before bed, it would help me go to sleep quicker and stay asleep longer, which is beneficial for me the next day because I can function better” (Participant 48). |
Figure 1:Reasons for using cannabis in each stage of reproduction, and overlap in reasons for use. Each Venn diagram depicts the number of participants who described their use as pertaining to a specific category at the described stage of reproduction. Each of the 3 categories is represented by a primary-coloured circle. The overlapping areas represent the number of participants who described their use as pertaining to multiple categories.
Illustrative qualitative data to support description of cannabis use at each stage of reproduction
| Stage of reproduction | Finding | Illustrative quote |
|---|---|---|
| Prepregnancy | All participants used cannabis before pregnancy for many reasons, typically beginning with recreational use. | “Long before I had [multiple sclerosis], I’ve always used recreationally” (Participant 18). |
| Many participants used cannabis to cope with the unpleasant or difficult aspects of life (e.g., to improve sleep quality, to relax, to alleviate mild anxiety). | “It was something that I found would just help me be calmer. A little more patient and just kind of like relax and let the day go kind of thing” (Participant 49). | |
| More than half of participants described their prepregnancy cannabis use as motivated by reasons that spanned multiple categories. | “It really helps with a myriad of problems. Like it will help with my sleep, with my headaches—I get chronic migraines — but I mean I also enjoy it [laughter]” (Participant 22). | |
| Pregnancy | Motivations for cannabis use changed during pregnancy. Many participants chose to abstain for fear of harming their developing fetus. | “I wasn’t sure of the side effects and I would hate for something to happen and it was pretty much my fault. I decided it’s only 40 weeks, I can handle 40 weeks and then afterwards I can readjust and decide through breastfeeding” (Participant 35). |
| Other reasons for ceasing included stigma, guilt, affordability, desire to remain alert and sober, and potential interference with other medications. | “I had a fear of my physician judging me” (Participant 14). | |
| Of those who continued to use cannabis during pregnancy, nearly all participants explained their motivation as related to symptom management for conditions that pre-existed pregnancy or were related to pregnancy (most commonly nausea and vomiting). | “I couldn’t keep anything down, including water and my own saliva, so I started using cannabis. It essentially kept me alive for half my pregnancy, if not more” (Participant 1). | |
| Some participants tried other medical alternatives for symptom management and found them ineffective. | “I find that the Diclectin or whatever the hell the pills they gave me for nausea, it doesn’t help as well as the cannabis does so I just kind of threw the pills away and kept smoking” (Participant 40). | |
| Many participants used cannabis for coping alongside their symptom management use. Reasons for coping were very similar to those provided prepregnancy. | “It was kind of hard to manage my anxiety and stress and taking care of a little baby, like a little child, while being pregnant, so I continued to smoke and use the edibles at that time. I found that it helped with the nausea and a lot of times it helped keep me calm and I was able to focus more” (Participant 34). | |
| Few participants described using cannabis for sensation-seeking reasons during pregnancy. | “I’m doing it for a little break and I think a doctor can’t give me any suggestions besides maybe like ‘go for a run’ or something” (Participant 44). | |
| Lactation | Participants using for sensation-seeking reasons compared cannabis and alcohol use. They found cannabis useful to relax and unwind. | “It was something I did — like it was almost like alcohol — it’s the end of the day, the kids go to bed, you have a glass of wine, well I would go smoke a bowl” (Participant 33). |
| Reasons related to symptom management during lactation resembled those described before pregnancy, as symptoms related to pregnancy (e.g., nausea) had subsided. | “I don’t have that same kind of intense emotional turmoil I had throughout my pregnancy … and the nausea is gone” (Participant 16). | |
| Cannabis was described by some participants as more helpful than pharmaceutical medication. | “I’ve gone from 15 pills a day and no cannabis to three pills a day and cannabis and I’m able to focus and be there for my kids and be attentive and help them cope with their own emotions because I’m not numb” (Participant 38). | |
| Coping reasons during lactation also closely resembled those provided before pregnancy, with the addition of coping with the stress and monotony of caring for a newborn. | “With all the stress of having a baby and housework and keeping up with everything I did kind of — I’m not going to lie — I did depend on it a little more” (Participant 34). | |
| A small number of participants described their desire to use cannabis as influencing their choice to cease or not to initiate lactation. | “The milk was starting to go and the pumping was also a bit of a pain … so because of that and because of the fact that it was the thing keeping me from being able to use the marijuana — I had some episodes of anxiety where it would have been useful — I decided to stop [breastfeeding]” Participant 2). |
Figure 2:Illustration of variation in individual reasons for use across reproductive stages. This Sankey diagram shows the change in individual reasons for cannabis use between the stages of prepregnancy, pregnancy and lactation. Sensation-seeking is represented in yellow, symptom management is in blue, and coping is in red. The secondary colours indicate participants who described overlapping reasons for use. For example, the orange line represents people who described sensation-seeking (yellow) and coping (red) reasons for use; purple represents those who described both symptom management (blue) and coping (red) reasons for use. Participants who offered all 3 reasons for use (sensation-seeking, symptom management and coping) are represented in brown. Black indicates a participant did not use cannabis in that stage. In the lactation column, white indicates that a participant did not discuss lactation, either because they chose not to breastfeed or chestfeed, or because they had not yet given birth.