加拿大大麻合法化后5年的合法休闲大麻销售和阿片类药物相关死亡率:格兰杰因果分析。

Cannabis (Albuquerque, N.M.) Pub Date : 2024-12-12 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.26828/cannabis/2024/000261
André J McDonald, Alysha Cooper, Amanda Doggett, Kyla Belisario, James MacKillop
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:人们对娱乐性大麻合法化对阿片类药物相关死亡率趋势的人口影响知之甚少。由于大麻具有潜在的阿片类药物保护作用,人们假设大麻合法化增加了获得大麻的机会,从而减少了与阿片类药物有关的死亡。本研究的目的是研究在加拿大大麻合法化后的5年中,娱乐性(非医用)大麻的全国零售额与阿片类药物过量死亡之间的关系。方法:使用时间序列数据,我们应用格兰杰因果关系方法来评估合法休闲大麻销售趋势与阿片类药物相关死亡之间的关系。随着时间的推移,阿片类药物的销售和死亡人数都在增长,后者在COVID-19大流行爆发后出现了显著增长。结果:在不列颠哥伦比亚省、安大略省或全国范围内,我们没有发现支持增加合法化后销售格兰杰导致阿片类药物相关死亡变化的假设。结论:这些发现表明,合法化后合法休闲大麻销售的增加与阿片类药物相关死亡率的变化没有显著关联。随着合法大麻市场在加拿大变得更加根深蒂固,需要进行更长的随访期的进一步检查,但这些发现与先前的工作一致,表明合法化与阿片类药物过量死亡率无关,并进一步破坏了作为其他司法管辖区合法化基础的假设联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Legal Recreational Cannabis Sales and Opioid-Related Mortality in the 5 Years Following Cannabis Legalization in Canada: A Granger Causality Analysis.

Objective: Little is known about the population-level impact of recreational cannabis legalization on trends in opioid-related mortality. Increased access to cannabis due to legalization has been hypothesized to reduce opioid-related deaths because of the potential opioid-sparing effects of cannabis. The objective of this study was to examine the relations between national retail sales of recreational (non-medical) cannabis and opioid overdose deaths in the 5 years following legalization in Canada.

Method: Using time-series data, we applied Granger causality methods to evaluate the association between trends in legal recreational cannabis sales and opioid-related deaths over time. Both sales and opioid deaths grew over time, with the latter exhibiting significant increases following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results: We found no support for the hypothesis that increasing post-legalization sales Granger caused changes in opioid-related deaths in British Columbia, Ontario, or at the national level.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that increases in legal recreational cannabis sales following legalization were not meaningfully associated with changes in opioid-related mortality. Further examination with longer follow-up periods will be needed as the legal cannabis market becomes more entrenched in Canada, but these findings converge with previous work suggesting legalization is not related to opioid overdose mortality and further undermine that hypothesized link as a basis for legalization in other jurisdictions.

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