| Literature DB >> 35132605 |
Colene Bentley1,2, Sara Izadi-Najafabadi3,4, Adam Raymakers3,4,5, Helen McTaggart-Cowan3,4,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The legalization of recreational cannabis use can enable cancer survivors to manage aspects of their care with cannabinoids without medical authorization or stigmatization. However, the absence of medical guidance-from the scientific literature or the healthcare system-makes it difficult for survivors to reach informed decisions about their care.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35132605 PMCID: PMC9197893 DOI: 10.1007/s40271-021-00567-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient ISSN: 1178-1653 Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Mapping findings from the literature review to the Theory of Planned Behaviour (from McTaggart-Cowan et al.) [10]
Initial 12 attributes, sample quotations from participants, and theory of planned behavior constructs
| TPB construct | Quotations from transcribed interviews with cancer survivors | Initial DCE attribute |
|---|---|---|
| Behavioral | “I've been kind of struggling with this whole – I realized how well [cannabis] works for sleeping because of course the initial diagnosis was terribly emotional and draining.” (ID8) “[Cannabis] just helps me to think and focus and really try to understand where I’m going in life, why this is happening to me … . When I don’t smoke weed sometimes I can get … not depressed but, you know, sad about some things, and weed helps to relax that.” (ID31) | Effectiveness of cannabis |
| Behavioral | “I mean it was good for my nausea, it was good for sleeping, it was good for depression, anxiety. The pain, I guess. I think it was good for joint pain as well.” (ID27) “[I]t has helped because of the ability to now sleep through the night again [and] … help with anxiety and depression, because I got rest. So, it actually kept me off antidepressants.” (ID10) | Management of cancer symptoms |
| Behavioral | “I guess if there is any drug downside it can kind of make you drowsy a little bit, but at the same time it makes me sleep better the night before. So it’s a bit of a catch 22.” (ID27) “One, I don't like anything in my lungs and yesteryear it was always smoking it, okay? And that was one thing. And then the other reason [for not medicating symptoms with cannabis] was that I heard that people had the munchies with it and I didn’t want to keep eating because of that.” (ID24) | Side effects of cannabis |
| Behavioral | “I actually refrained from using some of my chemotherapy pills in exchange for marijuana, like the nausea pills.” (ID27) “I really don't like taking medicine, so I really like to find an alternative. And I did research on [cannabis] and I didn't see where there was that many side effects. But as you read the medication that I'm on, there was a lot of side effects.” (ID1) | Polypharmacy (management of medicines) |
| Normative | “I’ve spent far too many years worrying about what everybody else thought of me, you know, only to get to this point in my life and say, I really don’t give a damn. It’s all about me now.” (ID9) “[F]or example, my mom, which is the older generation … it was very like, ‘Oh my God, [...] how are you going to deal with – you know, you’re going to be high all the time.’” (ID10) “And a lot of it is still a secret because I have children, and I’m not too sure how they would react.” (ID6) | My family’s approval of my medicating with cannabis |
| Normative | “I've had a number of oncologists over the course of my treatment, and no-one has ever raised it as something to even think about, so I kind of wonder whether the medical professional[s] really look at it as being a good alternative.” (ID9) “Both my family doctor and the specialists that I’ve seen have advised that there are people who use cannabis, that there are people that benefit from it, and there are people that don’t benefit from it. So, they say it will be a conscious decision on my own part if I wanted to do it, and if I wanted to and I needed their help, they would help me with it.” (ID15) “My own personal physician that I've had for 25 years said, ‘If you're using [cannabis] then you'd better find a new doctor because I won't see you anymore.’ So I’ve had to hide it from him because otherwise he’s kicking me out the door.” (ID14) | My doctor’s recommendation on medicating with cannabis |
| Normative | “I was hoping that the specialist could give me, you know, like a prescription with like a dose that has been shown to alleviate symptoms or things like that.” (ID21) | Receipt of medical cannabis prescription or referral |
| Normative | “Well, it gives me a chance to remove the illegal, you could get into trouble, you could go to jail stigma attached to it. So that's really important for me because of my dad being a police officer and me being a teacher and all of the things that are associated with that and a role model and things like that.” (ID24) “The legalization [of cannabis] didn’t [change my willingness to medicate with it]. My work … has taken me overseas and into the States. And I do not want to wind up going to a border crossing and being asked if I use cannabis. I don’t want to have to say yes.” (ID15) | Legalization of cannabis |
| Control | “The cost for a cancer patient to buy medical marijuana through one of the legal providers is astronomical and extremely unrealistic for anybody to go through.” (ID27) “Because even now with the legalization, the one legal store here and the two [other] ones, I can buy it from my guy at a hell of a lot less than what those stores are asking for their price.” (ID7) “My tax last year, I was [paying] $11K in a year. [...] And that was only medicinal.” (ID16) | My monthly out-of-pocket cost |
| Control | “So, to go see the [cannabis] specialist at the clinic, I needed to have a referral from my oncologist. [...] So when I asked her, she willingly signed the paper. She said, ‘For sure, there's no harm in that.’” (ID21) “[My family doctor] did not prescribe [cannabis], but she was very supportive but couldn’t facilitate it, fine. Cancer doctor was also very open and very supportive but … she doesn’t deal with any of the prescription there and does not agree with opiate use at this time.” (ID16) | Access to cannabis |
| Control | “I was experimenting with the tinctures before, and I wasn't sure how much I need to take.” (ID8) “I wonder what would be the ideal amount if somebody knew a lot about this topic and was like, ‘Here's the ideal amount you should be having.’ You know, ‘You should be taking it once a week’ or like, ‘once a month’ or ‘You should be taking this one that's this percentage of THC and this percentage of CBD.’ Like if somebody knew that information … that would be helpful.” (ID32) | Cannabis dosage |
| Control | “I went on a couple international trips, so of course I didn't travel with any cannabis, and I had no issues sleeping without it.” (ID8) “During treatment, probably [used edibles] only the first few days, three to four days after my treatment, because that was when my symptoms were the worst …. And then I would stop using it.” (ID23) | Ability to stop medicating with cannabis |
CBD cannabidiol, DCE discrete choice experiment, THC tetrahydrocannabinol, TPB theory of planned behavior
Further refinement of initial attributes
| Initial attribute | Modification and reason | Revised attribute(s) (if applicable) |
|---|---|---|
| Management of cancer symptoms | Combined with “effectiveness of cannabis” | Effectiveness of cannabis |
| Polypharmacy | Removed, because the content captured under this concept was too diffuse | NA |
| Dosage | Captured under “access to cannabis” and “my doctor’s opinion about cannabis” | Access to cannabis; my doctor’s opinion about cannabis |
| Receipt of medical cannabis prescription | Captured under “access to cannabis” and “my doctor’s recommendation on medicating with cannabis”; “my doctor’s recommendation” changed to “my doctor’s opinion” | Access to cannabis; my doctor’s opinion about cannabis |
| Ability to stop medicating with cannabis | Captured under “side effects of cannabis” | Chance of side effects |
| Legalization of cannabis | Removed, since it describes the current state of legislation in Canada | NA |
| My monthly out-of-pocket cost | Although only some cancer survivors referred to the cost of cannabis, a willingness-to-pay attribute was retained to provide an accurate representation of the decision-making scenario | My monthly out-of-pocket cost |
| NA | The ability to perform everyday activities was added as an indirect measure of quality of life. It was not explicitly asked during the semistructured interviews, but most participants believed that medicating with cannabis could enable to them to perform their everyday activities | Everyday activities |
NA not applicable
Revised list of attributes, levels, and related TPB constructs
| TPB | Attribute | Level |
|---|---|---|
| Behavioral | Effectiveness of cannabis | Cancer symptoms are managed all the time |
| Cancer symptoms are managed most of the time | ||
| Cancer symptoms are managed some of the time | ||
| Behavioral | Everyday activities | Performed all the time |
| Performed most of the time | ||
| Performed some of the time | ||
| Behavioral | Chance of side effects | High |
| Moderate | ||
| Low | ||
| Normative | Opinions of my family and friends about cannabis | Supports my cannabis medication |
| Somewhat supports my cannabis medication | ||
| Does not support my cannabis medication | ||
| Normative | My doctor’s opinions about cannabis | Supports my cannabis medication |
| Somewhat supports my cannabis medication | ||
| Does not support my cannabis medication | ||
| Control | Access to cannabis | Prescription obtained from my doctor |
| Prescription obtained from a cannabis clinic | ||
| Obtained from a neighborhood dispensary | ||
| Obtained from another source | ||
| Control | My monthly out-of-pocket cost | $50 |
| $100 | ||
| $250 | ||
| $1000 |
Costs are presented in Canadian dollars
TBP theory of planned behavior
Final attributes and levels
| TPB | Attribute | Level |
|---|---|---|
| Behavioral | Effectiveness of cannabis | Cancer symptoms are managed all the time |
| Cancer symptoms are managed most of the time | ||
| Cancer symptoms are managed some of the time | ||
| Behavioral | Everyday activities | Performed all the time |
| Performed most of the time | ||
| Performed some of the time | ||
| Behavioral | Chance of unwanted side effects | High |
| Moderate | ||
| Low | ||
| Normative | Opinions of my family and friends about cannabis | Supports my cannabis medication |
| Somewhat supports my cannabis medication | ||
| Does not support my cannabis medication | ||
| Normative | My doctor’s opinions about cannabis | Supports my cannabis medication |
| Somewhat supports my cannabis medication | ||
| Does not support my cannabis medication | ||
| Control | Access to cannabis | Prescription obtained from my doctor |
| Prescription obtained from a cannabis clinic | ||
| Obtained from a neighborhood dispensary | ||
| Obtained from another source | ||
| Control | My monthly out-of-pocket cost | $50 |
| $100 | ||
| $250 | ||
| $750 |
Costs are presented in Canadian dollars
TBP theory of planned behavior
| This article describes a qualitative research approach to developing a preference survey aimed at understanding Canadian cancer survivors’ decisions to manage their symptoms with cannabis in the context of legalized cannabis consumption. |
| Qualitative research is foundational to achieving a discrete choice experiment (DCE) design that is meaningful to patients and stakeholders, context sensitive, and amenable to policy formation. |
| Our findings showed that cannabis was widely believed to have therapeutic effects. However, the stigma often associated with cannabis use in social and healthcare contexts left some survivors without medical guidance to support their decisions regarding cannabis consumption and symptom relief. |
| In jurisdictions such as Canada, where recreational cannabis consumption was recently legalized, this information can be used to support person-centered care and shared decision making between patients and physicians in oncology and health policy. |