Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes

Abstract Background Thirty-three US states and Washington, D.C., have enacted medical cannabis laws allowing patients with chronic non-cancer pain to use cannabis, when recommended by a physician, to manage their condition. However, clinical guidelines do not recommend cannabis for treatment of chro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emma E. McGinty, Kayla N. Tormohlen, Colleen L. Barry, Mark C. Bicket, Lainie Rutkow, Elizabeth A. Stuart
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:Implementation Science
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-020-01071-2
id doaj-73457d08ba1b4152b06b6a1a7f6c69f2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-73457d08ba1b4152b06b6a1a7f6c69f22021-01-10T12:10:46ZengBMCImplementation Science1748-59082021-01-0116111310.1186/s13012-020-01071-2Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomesEmma E. McGintyKayla N. TormohlenColleen L. BarryMark C. BicketLainie RutkowElizabeth A. StuartAbstract Background Thirty-three US states and Washington, D.C., have enacted medical cannabis laws allowing patients with chronic non-cancer pain to use cannabis, when recommended by a physician, to manage their condition. However, clinical guidelines do not recommend cannabis for treatment of chronic non-cancer pain due to limited and mixed evidence of effectiveness. How state medical cannabis laws affect delivery of evidence-based treatment for chronic non-cancer pain is unclear. These laws could lead to substitution of cannabis in place of clinical guideline-discordant opioid prescribing, reducing risk of opioid use disorder and overdose. Conversely, state medical cannabis laws could lead to substitution of cannabis in place of guideline-concordant treatments such as topical analgesics or physical therapy. This protocol describes a mixed-methods study examining the implementation and effects of state medical cannabis laws on treatment of chronic non-cancer pain. A key contribution of the study is the examination of how variation in state medical cannabis laws’ policy implementation rules affects receipt of chronic non-cancer pain treatments. Methods The study uses a concurrent-embedded design. The primary quantitative component of the study employs a difference-in-differences design using a policy trial emulation approach. Quantitative analyses will evaluate state medical cannabis laws’ effects on treatment for chronic non-cancer pain as well as on receipt of treatment for opioid use disorder, opioid overdose, cannabis use disorder, and cannabis poisoning among people with chronic non-cancer pain. Secondary qualitative and survey methods will be used to characterize implementation of state medical cannabis laws through interviews with state leaders and representative surveys of physicians who treat, and patients who experience, chronic non-cancer pain in states with medical cannabis laws. Discussion This study will examine the effects of medical cannabis laws on patients’ receipt of guideline-concordant non-opioid, non-cannabis treatments for chronic non-cancer pain and generate new evidence on the effects of state medical cannabis laws on adverse opioid outcomes. Results will inform the dynamic policy environment in which numerous states consider, enact, and/or amend medical cannabis laws each year.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-020-01071-2CannabisLawMixed-methodsPolicy implementation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma E. McGinty
Kayla N. Tormohlen
Colleen L. Barry
Mark C. Bicket
Lainie Rutkow
Elizabeth A. Stuart
spellingShingle Emma E. McGinty
Kayla N. Tormohlen
Colleen L. Barry
Mark C. Bicket
Lainie Rutkow
Elizabeth A. Stuart
Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
Implementation Science
Cannabis
Law
Mixed-methods
Policy implementation
author_facet Emma E. McGinty
Kayla N. Tormohlen
Colleen L. Barry
Mark C. Bicket
Lainie Rutkow
Elizabeth A. Stuart
author_sort Emma E. McGinty
title Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
title_short Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
title_full Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
title_fullStr Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of US state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
title_sort protocol: mixed-methods study of how implementation of us state medical cannabis laws affects treatment of chronic non-cancer pain and adverse opioid outcomes
publisher BMC
series Implementation Science
issn 1748-5908
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Thirty-three US states and Washington, D.C., have enacted medical cannabis laws allowing patients with chronic non-cancer pain to use cannabis, when recommended by a physician, to manage their condition. However, clinical guidelines do not recommend cannabis for treatment of chronic non-cancer pain due to limited and mixed evidence of effectiveness. How state medical cannabis laws affect delivery of evidence-based treatment for chronic non-cancer pain is unclear. These laws could lead to substitution of cannabis in place of clinical guideline-discordant opioid prescribing, reducing risk of opioid use disorder and overdose. Conversely, state medical cannabis laws could lead to substitution of cannabis in place of guideline-concordant treatments such as topical analgesics or physical therapy. This protocol describes a mixed-methods study examining the implementation and effects of state medical cannabis laws on treatment of chronic non-cancer pain. A key contribution of the study is the examination of how variation in state medical cannabis laws’ policy implementation rules affects receipt of chronic non-cancer pain treatments. Methods The study uses a concurrent-embedded design. The primary quantitative component of the study employs a difference-in-differences design using a policy trial emulation approach. Quantitative analyses will evaluate state medical cannabis laws’ effects on treatment for chronic non-cancer pain as well as on receipt of treatment for opioid use disorder, opioid overdose, cannabis use disorder, and cannabis poisoning among people with chronic non-cancer pain. Secondary qualitative and survey methods will be used to characterize implementation of state medical cannabis laws through interviews with state leaders and representative surveys of physicians who treat, and patients who experience, chronic non-cancer pain in states with medical cannabis laws. Discussion This study will examine the effects of medical cannabis laws on patients’ receipt of guideline-concordant non-opioid, non-cannabis treatments for chronic non-cancer pain and generate new evidence on the effects of state medical cannabis laws on adverse opioid outcomes. Results will inform the dynamic policy environment in which numerous states consider, enact, and/or amend medical cannabis laws each year.
topic Cannabis
Law
Mixed-methods
Policy implementation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13012-020-01071-2
work_keys_str_mv AT emmaemcginty protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
AT kaylantormohlen protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
AT colleenlbarry protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
AT markcbicket protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
AT lainierutkow protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
AT elizabethastuart protocolmixedmethodsstudyofhowimplementationofusstatemedicalcannabislawsaffectstreatmentofchronicnoncancerpainandadverseopioidoutcomes
_version_ 1724343356953198592