Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
Addiction. 2018 Nov;113(11):2060-2070. doi: 10.1111/add.14382. Epub 2018 Aug 6.
While the United States has been experiencing an opioid epidemic, 29 states and Washington DC have legalized cannabis for medical use. This study examined whether state-wide medical cannabis legalization was associated with reduction in opioids received by Medicaid enrollees.
Secondary data analysis of state-level opioid prescription records from 1993-2014 Medicaid State Drug Utilization Data. Linear time-series regressions assessed the associations between medical cannabis legalization and opioid prescriptions, controlling for state-level time-varying policy covariates (such as prescription drug monitoring programs) and socio-economic covariates (such as income).
United States.
Drug prescription records for patients enrolled in fee-for-service Medicaid programs that primarily provide health-care coverage to low-income and disabled people.
The primary outcomes were population-adjusted number, dosage and Medicaid spending on opioid prescriptions. Outcomes for Schedule II opioids (e.g. hydrocodone, oxycodone) and Schedule III opioids (e.g. codeine) were analyzed separately. The primary policy variable of interest was the implementation of state-wide medical cannabis legalization.
For Schedule III opioid prescriptions, medical cannabis legalization was associated with a 29.6% (P = 0.03) reduction in number of prescriptions, 29.9% (P = 0.02) reduction in dosage and 28.8% (P = 0.04) reduction in related Medicaid spending. No evidence was found to support the associations between medical cannabis legalization and Schedule II opioid prescriptions. Permitting medical cannabis dispensaries was not associated with Schedule II or Schedule III opioid prescriptions after controlling for medical cannabis legalization. It was estimated that, if all the states had legalized medical cannabis by 2014, Medicaid annual spending on opioid prescriptions would be reduced by 17.8 million dollars.
State-wide medical cannabis legalization appears to have been associated with reductions in both prescriptions and dosages of Schedule III (but not Schedule II) opioids received by Medicaid enrollees in the United States.
在美国经历阿片类药物流行的同时,29 个州和华盛顿特区已经将医用大麻合法化。本研究旨在探讨州级医用大麻合法化是否与医疗补助受保人接受的阿片类药物减少有关。
对 1993 年至 2014 年医疗补助州药物使用数据中的州级阿片类药物处方记录进行二次数据分析。线性时间序列回归评估了医用大麻合法化与阿片类药物处方之间的关联,同时控制了州级随时间变化的政策协变量(如处方药物监测计划)和社会经济协变量(如收入)。
美国。
参与按服务收费医疗补助计划的患者的药物处方记录,这些计划主要为低收入和残疾人提供医疗保健。
主要结果是人口调整后的阿片类药物处方数量、剂量和医疗补助支出。分别分析了 II 类阿片类药物(如氢可酮、羟考酮)和 III 类阿片类药物(如可待因)的结果。主要关注的政策变量是实施全州医用大麻合法化。
对于 III 类阿片类药物处方,医用大麻合法化与处方数量减少 29.6%(P=0.03)、剂量减少 29.9%(P=0.02)和相关医疗补助支出减少 28.8%(P=0.04)相关。没有证据表明医用大麻合法化与 II 类阿片类药物处方之间存在关联。在控制医用大麻合法化后,允许开设医用大麻药房与 II 类或 III 类阿片类药物处方无关。据估计,如果所有州都在 2014 年之前将医用大麻合法化,医疗补助在阿片类药物处方上的年度支出将减少 1780 万美元。
全州医用大麻合法化似乎与美国医疗补助受保人接受的 III 类(而非 II 类)阿片类药物的处方数量和剂量减少有关。