Study: Nationwide medical marijuana laws would save lives and a billion taxpayer dollars
A fascinating study in Health Affairs last year by a father-daughter pair of public policy researchers found that Medicare prescriptions for things like painkillers, antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications dropped sharply in states that introduced a medical marijuana program.
The implication? Offered the choice between taking medication prescribed by a doctor and self-medicating with pot, many older patients opted for the latter.
But the study left one big question unanswered: Since the study's authors the University of Georgia's Ashley Bradford and W. David Bradford only looked at Medicare data, they couldn't say for sure whether the findings held for younger patients too.
Now, we're getting more answers. This week, the Bradfords are back with a new study applying the same analysis to prescriptions under Medicaid, which covers low-income people of all ages. The results largely validate their previous work: Medicaid prescriptions for certain drugs fell significantly in states that adopted a medical marijuana law.
Specifically, anti-nausea drug prescriptions fell by 17 percent. Antidepressant prescriptions fell 13 percent, while prescriptions for seizure and psychosis drugs fell 12 percent.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/04/20/study-nationwide-medical-marijuana-laws-would-save-lives-and-a-billion-taxpayer-dollars/?utm_term=.a0d37215d09e