Literature DB >> 32080937

The association between recreational cannabis commercialization and cannabis exposures reported to the US National Poison Data System.

Yuyan Shi1, Di Liang1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Recreational cannabis has been legalized in 11 states and District of Columbia (DC) in the United States. Among these, 10 states further permitted retail sale to provide a legal supply to adults. This study examined the associations of cannabis exposures with recreational cannabis legalization and commercialization.
DESIGN: Secondary data analysis of state-quarter level cannabis exposures during 2010-17 in the United States. Linear regressions with a difference-in-differences design were used to compare pre- and post-legalization trends in states that legalized recreational cannabis to contemporaneous trends in states that did not legalize recreational cannabis.
SETTING: United States, including all 50 states and DC. CASES: Cannabis exposures reported to the US National Poison Data System. MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcome was state age-adjusted cannabis exposures reported to the US National Poison Data System per 1 000 000 population per quarter. The two policy variables of interest included (1) the enactment of recreational cannabis legalization (i.e. removing penalties for adults' possession of cannabis in a small amount for recreational use) and (2) the initiation of recreational cannabis commercialization (i.e. providing a legal supply of cannabis to adults through licensed dispensaries).
FINDINGS: The association between a state's enactment of recreational cannabis legalization and its changes in cannabis exposures was statistically non-significant overall. After controlling for recreational cannabis legalization, however, the initiation of recreational cannabis commercialization was associated with 5.06-5.80 more exposures per 1 000 000 population per quarter (67-77% increase relative to the pre-legalization average), depending on the composition of comparison states. The increase associated with commercialization was higher among minors than adults (7.97-9.53 versus 3.83-4.21 more exposures), higher among males than females (6.16-7.56 versus 3.76-3.91 more exposures) and higher among exposures with medical consequences than those without medical consequences (4.09-4.79 versus 0.97-1.01 more exposures).
CONCLUSION: An increase in cannabis exposures reported to the US National Poison Data System was observed following recreational cannabis commercialization in the United States.
© 2020 Society for the Study of Addiction.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cannabis; cannabis exposure; poisoning; recreational cannabis dispensaries; recreational cannabis legalization; retail sale

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32080937      PMCID: PMC7438241          DOI: 10.1111/add.15019

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Addiction        ISSN: 0965-2140            Impact factor:   6.526


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