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Pot legalization tied to drop in opioid prescribing rates

Impact of legal marijuana on opioids needs more study

FROM JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE


However, adult-use marijuana laws were associated with “even-lower” opioid prescribing rates, something that had not been investigated previously, according to Dr. Wen, who is with the University of Kentucky, Lexington, and Dr. Hockenberry of Emory University, Atlanta.

“Medical and adult-use marijuana laws have the potential to lower opioid prescribing for Medicaid enrollees, a high-risk population for chronic pain, opioid use disorder, and opioid overdose,” Dr. Wen and Dr. Hockenberry wrote in their report on the study, a cross-sectional analysis including all Medicaid fee-for-service and managed care enrollees during 2011-2016.

The rate of opioid prescribing in the study was –5.88% lower (95% confidence interval, –11.55% to approximately –0.21%) in association with medical marijuana laws, and –6.38% lower (95% CI, –12.20% to approximately –0.56%) for adult-use laws, they reported.

Based on those findings, policy discussions about the opioid epidemic should include the potential for liberalization of marijuana policies to reduce prescription opioid use and consequences in Medicaid enrollees, Dr. Wen and Dr. Hockenberry concluded.