Observations placeholder
HIV and cannabis
Identifier
007600
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
I know exactly how the medical profession and those responsible for drug legislation will read this - oh yes they will say, drug use and HIV are linked, and no doubt they will also say something to the effect 'well of course it all goes with that type of person........'
But that is not at all how I read it.
I read it that these poor people are self medicating and it must work because they are self medicating on a continuous basis. Cocaine and cannabis help HIV sufferers. They stop their HIV treatments because that isn't working or the side effects are too unpleasant to want to continue whereas the side effects of cannabis are negligible.
The symptoms described 'impairment of physical and mental health, low health related quality of life' are to be expected from those with HIV, they have nothing to do with the drugs.
Remember that cocaine was once used extensively for pain relief and cannabis is used for the same reasons today.
A description of the experience
Curr HIV Res. 2012 Dec;10(8):708-12. Monitoring drug use among HIV/AIDS patients in Brazil: should we combine self-report and urinalysis? Malbergier A1, do Amaral RA, Cardoso LR, Castel S.
Illicit drug use in HIV-infected patients can be linked to impairment of physical and mental health, low health related quality of life, and suboptimal adherence to HIV treatment.
This study aimed to evaluate the correlation of self report illicit drug use, urinalysis for cocaine and cannabis metabolites, and severity of dependence among HIV-infected patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART) in a treatment center in Brazil.
Four hundred and thirty-eight outpatients of an HIV referral center were interviewed and assessed for drug use (lifetime, last year and last month).
Urinalysis was performed to detect the presence of cocaine and cannabis metabolites in urine samples.
Overall agreement between self report and urinalysis was almost 68% for cannabis and higher than 85% for cocaine. Positive urinalysis was significantly associated with more than once a week cannabis (p< .0001) and cocaine (p< .0001) use during the last-month.
Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS) properly predicted positive cocaine urinalysis results (area under the curve [AUC] = .81, p = .0001).
Frequency of cannabis and cocaine use, SDS score degree and positive urinalysis for both drugs were correlated.
Our findings suggest that positive self-report is a reliable predictor of positive urine sample both for cannabis and cocaine, but since the agreement was not perfect, there is a role for urine drug screening in the care of patients with HIV-related conditions.
PMID: 23092174