Shi Yuyan
Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Apr 1;173:144-150. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.01.006. Epub 2017 Feb 21.
Twenty-eight states in the U.S have legalized medical marijuana, yet its impacts on severe health consequences such as hospitalizations remain unknown. Meanwhile, the prevalence of opioid pain reliever (OPR) use and outcomes has increased dramatically. Recent studies suggested unintended impacts of legalizing medical marijuana on OPR, but the evidence is still limited. This study examined the associations between state medical marijuana policies and hospitalizations related to marijuana and OPR.
State-level annual administrative records of hospital discharges during 1997-2014 were obtained from the State Inpatient Databases (SID). The outcome variables were rates of hospitalizations involving marijuana dependence or abuse, opioid dependence or abuse, and OPR overdose in 1000 discharges. Linear time-series regressions were used to assess the associations of implementing medical marijuana policies to hospitalizations, controlling for other marijuana- and OPR-related policies, socioeconomic factors, and state and year fixed effects.
Hospitalizations related to marijuana and OPR increased sharply by 300% on average in all states. Medical marijuana legalization was associated with 23% (p=0.008) and 13% (p=0.025) reductions in hospitalizations related to opioid dependence or abuse and OPR overdose, respectively; lagged effects were observed after policy implementation. The operation of medical marijuana dispensaries had no independent impacts on OPR-related hospitalizations. Medical marijuana polices had no associations with marijuana-related hospitalizations.
Medical marijuana policies were significantly associated with reduced OPR-related hospitalizations but had no associations with marijuana-related hospitalizations. Given the epidemic of problematic use of OPR, future investigation is needed to explore the causal pathways of these findings.
美国有28个州已将医用大麻合法化,但其对诸如住院等严重健康后果的影响仍不明确。与此同时,阿片类止痛药(OPR)的使用 prevalence 及其后果急剧增加。最近的研究表明医用大麻合法化对OPR有意外影响,但证据仍然有限。本研究调查了州医用大麻政策与与大麻和OPR相关的住院之间的关联。
从州住院数据库(SID)获得1997 - 2014年期间的州级年度医院出院行政记录。结果变量是每1000例出院中涉及大麻依赖或滥用、阿片类药物依赖或滥用以及OPR过量的住院率。使用线性时间序列回归来评估实施医用大麻政策与住院之间的关联,同时控制其他与大麻和OPR相关的政策、社会经济因素以及州和年份固定效应。
所有州与大麻和OPR相关的住院平均急剧增加了300%。医用大麻合法化分别与阿片类药物依赖或滥用以及OPR过量相关的住院减少23%(p = 0.008)和13%(p = 0.025)相关;在政策实施后观察到滞后效应。医用大麻药房的运营对与OPR相关的住院没有独立影响。医用大麻政策与与大麻相关的住院没有关联。
医用大麻政策与减少与OPR相关的住院显著相关,但与与大麻相关的住院没有关联。鉴于OPR使用问题的流行,需要未来的调查来探索这些发现的因果途径。