Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal

The decision to authorize a patient for continued enrollment in a state-sanctioned medical cannabis program is difficult in part due to the uncertainty in the accuracy of patient symptom reporting and health functioning including any possible effects on other medication use. We conducted a pragmatic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jacob M. Vigil, Sarah S. Stith, Anthony P. Reeve
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2018-01-01
Series:Pain Research and Management
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/5704128
id doaj-75b7a1e0c21e49e581178771fa3e2b3f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-75b7a1e0c21e49e581178771fa3e2b3f2020-11-25T01:39:21ZengHindawi LimitedPain Research and Management1203-67651918-15232018-01-01201810.1155/2018/57041285704128Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License RenewalJacob M. Vigil0Sarah S. Stith1Anthony P. Reeve2Department of Psychology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USADepartment of Economics, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USAIndustrial Rehabilitation Clinics, Albuquerque, NM, USAThe decision to authorize a patient for continued enrollment in a state-sanctioned medical cannabis program is difficult in part due to the uncertainty in the accuracy of patient symptom reporting and health functioning including any possible effects on other medication use. We conducted a pragmatic convenience study comparing patient reporting of previous and current prescription opioid usage to the opioid prescription records in the Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) among 131 chronic pain patients (mean age = 54; 54% male) seeking the first annual renewal of their New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program (NMMCP) license. Seventy-six percent of the patients reported using prescription opioids prior to enrollment in the NMMCP, however, the PMP records showed that only 49% of the patients were actually prescribed opioids in the six months prior to enrollment. Of the 64 patients with verifiable opioid prescriptions prior to NMMCP enrollment, 35 (55%) patients reported having eliminated the use of prescription opioids by the time of license renewal. PMP records showed that 26 patients (63% of patients claiming to have eliminated the use of opioid prescriptions and 41% of all patients with verifiable preenrollment opioid use) showed no prescription opioid activity at their first annual NMMCP renewal visit.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/5704128
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacob M. Vigil
Sarah S. Stith
Anthony P. Reeve
spellingShingle Jacob M. Vigil
Sarah S. Stith
Anthony P. Reeve
Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
Pain Research and Management
author_facet Jacob M. Vigil
Sarah S. Stith
Anthony P. Reeve
author_sort Jacob M. Vigil
title Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
title_short Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
title_full Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
title_fullStr Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of Patient Opioid Use Reporting at the Time of Medical Cannabis License Renewal
title_sort accuracy of patient opioid use reporting at the time of medical cannabis license renewal
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Pain Research and Management
issn 1203-6765
1918-1523
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The decision to authorize a patient for continued enrollment in a state-sanctioned medical cannabis program is difficult in part due to the uncertainty in the accuracy of patient symptom reporting and health functioning including any possible effects on other medication use. We conducted a pragmatic convenience study comparing patient reporting of previous and current prescription opioid usage to the opioid prescription records in the Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) among 131 chronic pain patients (mean age = 54; 54% male) seeking the first annual renewal of their New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program (NMMCP) license. Seventy-six percent of the patients reported using prescription opioids prior to enrollment in the NMMCP, however, the PMP records showed that only 49% of the patients were actually prescribed opioids in the six months prior to enrollment. Of the 64 patients with verifiable opioid prescriptions prior to NMMCP enrollment, 35 (55%) patients reported having eliminated the use of prescription opioids by the time of license renewal. PMP records showed that 26 patients (63% of patients claiming to have eliminated the use of opioid prescriptions and 41% of all patients with verifiable preenrollment opioid use) showed no prescription opioid activity at their first annual NMMCP renewal visit.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/5704128
work_keys_str_mv AT jacobmvigil accuracyofpatientopioidusereportingatthetimeofmedicalcannabislicenserenewal
AT sarahsstith accuracyofpatientopioidusereportingatthetimeofmedicalcannabislicenserenewal
AT anthonypreeve accuracyofpatientopioidusereportingatthetimeofmedicalcannabislicenserenewal
_version_ 1725049329940430848