The Denver Post

Medical pot laws are no answer for opioid deaths

- By Carla K. Johnson

A new study shoots down the notion that medical marijuana laws can prevent opioid overdose deaths, challengin­g a favorite talking point of legal pot advocates.

Researcher­s repeated an analysis that sparked excitement years ago. The previous work linked medical marijuana laws to slower than expected increases in state prescripti­on opioid death rates from 1999 to 2010. The original authors speculated patients might be substituti­ng marijuana for painkiller­s, but they warned against drawing conclusion­s.

Still, states ravaged by painkiller

overdose deaths began to rethink marijuana, leading several to legalize pot for medical use.

When the new researcher­s included data through 2017, they found the reverse: States passing medical marijuana laws saw a 23 percent higher than expected rate of deaths involving prescripti­on opioids.

Legalizing medical marijuana “is not going to be a solution to the opioid overdose crisis,” said Chelsea Shover of Stanford University School of Medicine. “It would be wonderful if that were true, but the evidence doesn’t suggest that it is.”

Shover and colleagues reported the findings Monday in Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences. It’s unlikely, they said, that medical marijuana laws caused first one big effect and then the opposite. Any beneficial link was likely coincident­al.

“We don’t think it’s reasonable to say it was saving lives before but it’s killing people now,” Shover said.

Prescripti­on pills once were involved in the largest share of overdose deaths, but that changed as heroin and then fentanyl surged. The studies on marijuana laws and opioid deaths don’t account for that.

The new study undermines recent policy changes in some states. Last week, New Mexico joined New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia in approving marijuana for patients with opioid addiction.

“I was told my paper helped change the law in New York. I was appalled,” said Rosalie Liccardo Pacula of the Rand Drug Policy Research Center. She coauthored a 2018 study on marijuana laws and overdose deaths.

Experts agree evidence doesn’t support marijuana as a treatment for opioid addiction. Drugs such as buprenorph­ine, morphine and naltrexone should be used instead, Pacula said.

Authors of the original research welcomed the new analysis.

“We weren’t happy when a billboard went up saying marijuana laws reduce overdose deaths,” said Brendan Saloner of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

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