After Marijuana Legalization Did Opioid Overdose Go Down?

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  • ESTROGEN GUY
    VET
    • Aug 2018
    • 1891

    After Marijuana Legalization Did Opioid Overdose Go Down?

    After Marijuana Legalization Did Opioid Overdoses Go Up, Stay the Same, or Go Down?
    wdcope4129@gmail.com 31st May 2022


    What happened in states after medical marijuana laws were passed? Did opioid overdoses go up, stay the same, or go down?

    Millions of people in the United States have been diagnosed with an opioid use disorder, and more than 80 Americans die each day from opioid overdose. Where is this coming from? Most “new heroin users started out misusing opioid prescription painkillers.” This is important because more than 200 million opioid painkiller prescriptions are still written every year. Did you catch that number? Two hundred million prescriptions every year, “a number closely approximating the entire adult population in the United States.” That’s incredible.

    “‘When you see something like the opioid addiction crisis blossoming in so many states around this country, the last thing we should be doing is encouraging people’ to smoke cannabis, [White House Spokesperson Sean] Spicer told reporters.” But, if opioid addiction starts with people taking prescription pain pills, maybe cannabis would reduce the problem by offering a substitute painkiller. Alternatively, maybe cannabis would act like a “gateway” drug or “stepping stone” to harder drugs, potentially making the opioid epidemic worse, as I discuss in my video Marijuana Legalization and the Opioid Epidemic.

    Well, first, does cannabis work? “Is it a truly effective drug for pain that is arbitrarily stigmatized by many and criminalized by the federal government? Or is it without any medical utility, its advocates hiding behind a screen of misplaced (or deliberately misleading) compassion for the ill?” The official position of the American Medical Association is that marijuana “has no scientifically proven, currently accepted medical use for preventing or treating any disease,” but what does the science say?

    “Despite the widespread use of opioids, 50% – 80% of advanced cancer patients die with unmet pain-relief needs.” So, adding cannabis may help. Indeed, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials have found that cannabis compounds do produce pain relief, “equivalent to moderate doses of codeine,” an opioid used to treat mild to moderate pain, but if you’re dying from cancer, don’t you want the good stuff? Why not just crank up the morphine?

    If you wanted, you could put someone in coma and erase all their pain, but there’s a very real problem with such high doses of opiates: Here you are, at the end of life, surrounded by loved ones, but you’re so doped up you can’t even say goodbye. This is where cannabis may help. It may allow patients to drop down the opiate dose a bit without compromising pain control.

    That’s what many report, anyway. If you look at New England, for example, which can be thought of as ground zero for the opioid epidemic, in just one year, “there were enough opioids dispensed from Maine pharmacies in 2014 to supply every person in the state with a 16-day supply.” What are they doing up there?

    Among the New Englanders surveyed who were on opioids, however, most claimed “they reduced their [opioid] use since they started MC,” medical cannabis. Some also reduced their use of antidepressants, alcohol, anti-anxiety medications, migraine meds, and sleeping pills. Forty percent said they were able to reduce their opioid use “a lot,” as you can see at 3:16 in my video.

    Cannabis use may even reduce the use of crack cocaine. It may seem strange to give drugs to drug addicts, but if people even make a partial switch from more to less harmful drugs, overall harm may be reduced. So, what happened after medical marijuana laws were passed? Did opioid overdoses go up, stay the same, or go down?

    They went down.

    “Medical cannabis laws are associated with significantly lower state-level opioid overdose mortality rates,” about a 25 percent lower rate of overdose deaths. “The striking implication is that medical marijuana laws…may represent a promising approach for stemming” the opioid overdose epidemic. “If true, this finding upsets the applecart of conventional wisdom regarding the public health implications of marijuana legalization and medicinal usefulness.” On the one hand, we have the AMA saying cannabis isn’t medically helpful, but, on the other hand, if people are getting enough benefit using it so they can cut down on their prescriptions, then obviously something is going on.

    What about other prescription drugs? As you can see at 4:37 in my video, once medical marijuana laws were passed, fewer people were filling prescriptions—and not only fewer prescriptions for painkillers, but fewer prescriptions for anti-anxiety drugs, antidepressants, anti-nausea drugs, antipsychotics, anti-seizure drugs, and sleeping pills. If all states adopted medical marijuana laws, that could save around half a billion dollars a year. But, the half-billion dollars taxpayers would save, is the half-billion bucks drug companies would lose, so it’s no wonder Big Pharma is freaking out. Why do you think pharmaceutical corporations, including the makers of OxyContin and Vicodin, were major sponsors of the marijuana prohibition lobby, trying to stop legalization? “Other major sponsors of marijuana prohibition were the beer industry, police unions, and the private prison industry.”

    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    More than 200 million opioid painkiller prescriptions are written annually despite the diagnosis of millions in the United States with an opioid use disorder and more than 80 Americans dying every day from opioid overdose.
    Might cannabis act as a gateway to harder drugs, like opioids, or might it reduce opioid addiction by offering a substitute painkiller to prescription pills?
    The American Medical Association’s official position is that marijuana “has no scientifically proven, currently accepted medical use for preventing or treating any disease,” but studies have found that cannabis compounds produce pain relief “equivalent to moderate doses of codeine,” an opioid used to treat mild to moderate pain.
    At the end of life, cannabis may allow patients to reduce opiate doses without compromising pain relief such that they may not be in such a drug-induced stupor that they cannot say goodbye.
    Most New Englanders taking opioids claimed they reduced their opioid use after starting medical cannabis, and some also reduced use of alcohol, antidepressants, sleeping pills, and anti-anxiety and migraine medications. Cannabis may also reduce use of crack cocaine.
    After medical marijuana laws were passed, opioid overdoses went down, about a 25 percent lower rate of opioid overdose deaths, and fewer people were filling prescriptions—not only for painkillers, but also for anti-anxiety drugs, antidepressants, anti-nausea drugs, antipsychotics, anti-seizure drugs, and sleeping pills.
    About half a billion dollars would be saved annually if medical marijuana laws were adopted across the United States, but the half-billion taxpayers would save is the half-billion drug companies would lose.
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  • Rebornlite
    VET
    • Dec 2018
    • 373

    #2
    I was one of the very few lucky bastards to survive the opioid epidemic. I got hooked back in early 2000's before there was awareness about the crisis. Dr prescribed narcotics for back pain that started with hydrocodone and eventually oxycontin which progressed to a heroin addiction that nearly killed me.

    I am all for legalized Marijuana use for both medical and recreational use. Control and tax the sale and use the money for addiction rehabilitation programs. Divert the money away from the black market and Cartels....

    Comment

    • Magnesium
      Vet
      • Dec 2009
      • 367

      #3
      While marijuana isn't the miracle drug people claim, it does have some legitimate therapeutic uses and is very effective from a recreational standpoint. Plus I've never heard of anybody overdosing on marijuana. Sure, I've been WAY too high back in my younger years, but there isn't the risk of death like with opioids. Especially with fentanyl being used in knock off drugs.

      Luckily when I've been prescribed opioids for surgery I never felt any kind of high from them, just constipated.

      Comment

      • Oatmeal77
        VET
        • Feb 2019
        • 47

        #4
        I'm somewhat of an unusual breed. I'm a medical marijuana card holder who doesn't like to be high. I won't go too much into detail but I use a 1:1 ratio of CBD and THC which creates what's known as the "entourage effect ". I recently had cervical disc replacement surgery. This actually works so well for me that I turned down the opioid pain meds.

        Comment

        • liftsiron
          Administrator
          • Nov 2003
          • 18436

          #5
          Originally posted by Rebornlite
          I was one of the very few lucky bastards to survive the opioid epidemic. I got hooked back in early 2000's before there was awareness about the crisis. Dr prescribed narcotics for back pain that started with hydrocodone and eventually oxycontin which progressed to a heroin addiction that nearly killed me.

          I am all for legalized Marijuana use for both medical and recreational use. Control and tax the sale and use the money for addiction rehabilitation programs. Divert the money away from the black market and Cartels....
          I voted for legalization of marijuana for the exact reasons you stated.
          ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle

          Comment

          • 1bigun11
            Moderator
            • May 2022
            • 289

            #6
            If you are the type of person who wants to lock up your fellow citizens for smoking a plant that God made because it makes them feel a bit happier in this world, then you’re the fucking criminal.

            Comment

            • ozzy69
              Assistant Admin
              • Jun 2011
              • 4826

              #7
              Originally posted by 1bigun11
              If you are the type of person who wants to lock up your fellow citizens for smoking a plant that God made because it makes them feel a bit happier in this world, then you’re the fucking criminal.
              Amen——respect

              Comment

              • willsgotrythm
                Vet
                • Jul 2012
                • 459

                #8
                Originally posted by 1bigun11
                If you are the type of person who wants to lock up your fellow citizens for smoking a plant that God made because it makes them feel a bit happier in this world, then you’re the fucking criminal.
                I agree with you, but I just wanted to point out that God made hemlock and that's not good for you. God also made the poppy plant that opioids are made from. Each of those plants has a place in the ecosystem. Just because God made it doesn't mean it's good for you. I think ALL drugs should be at least decriminalized. No other man should be able to tell you what you can or cannot put in your body.

                Comment

                • 1bigun11
                  Moderator
                  • May 2022
                  • 289

                  #9
                  Originally posted by willsgotrythm
                  I agree with you, but I just wanted to point out that God made hemlock and that's not good for you. God also made the poppy plant that opioids are made from. Each of those plants has a place in the ecosystem. Just because God made it doesn't mean it's good for you. I think ALL drugs should be at least decriminalized. No other man should be able to tell you what you can or cannot put in your body.
                  If you think I said that if God makes something it is always good for you to consume, then you misunderstood me. Because I didn't say that. In fact, I said nothing even close to that.

                  Comment

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