You are here
Home 🌿 Medical Cannabis News 🌿 B.C. patients with opioid use disorder who tested positive for THC had reduced fentanyl exposure risk 🌿B.C. patients with opioid use disorder who tested positive for THC had reduced fentanyl exposure risk
Ongoing opioid overdose crisis is driven largely by exposure to illicitly manufactured fentanyl.
FILE PHOTO: Vancouver police and doctors raise awareness about fentanyl during a press conference at VPD headquarters in Vancouver, B.C., Mar. 2, 2015. /Â PHOTO BY ARLEN REDEKOPÂ /PNG
A study out of B.C. involving people undergoing opioid agonist therapy (OAT) for opioid use disorder (OUD) found that cannabis use was associated with lower exposures to potentially deadly fentanyl.
The finding is based on data drawn from two community-recruited prospective cohorts of people who use drugs in Vancouver, notes the abstract of the study, published this month in Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
“Overall study interviews, cannabis use was independently associated with reduced likelihood of being recently exposed to fentanyl,” states the abstract. That risk was called “significantly lower.”
Authors point out “the ongoing opioid overdose crisis is driven largely by exposure to illicitly manufactured fentanyl.”
That being the case, they say the findings “reinforce the need for experimental trials to investigate the potential benefits and risks of controlled cannabinoid administration for people on OAT.”
Exploring the link, if any, between cannabis and opioids, both legal and illegal, is attracting more attention. /Â PHOTO BY FILE
Exploring the link, if any, between weed and opioids, both legal and illegal, is attracting attention. Earlier this year in the U.S., cannabis expert Ziva Cooper, Ph.D. received a US$3.9 million grant to study if weed terpenes can reduce the amount of opioid medication a person uses to manage pain.
In a 2018 blog, cannabis expert Dr. Peter Grinspoon cites one study that showed “when medical marijuana laws went into effect in a given state, opioid prescriptions fell by 2.21 million daily doses filled per year. When medical marijuana dispensaries opened, prescriptions for opioids fell by 3.74 million daily doses per year.”
Another study last year out of the University of British Columbia found people with chronic pain who use cannabis daily are less likely to use illicit opioids, including fentanyl. Study participants were marginalized residents of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, an area that has long witnessed the overdose epidemic.
A study out of Columbia University, though, found use among adults who consumed non-medical opioids “was at least as prevalent on days when cannabis was used as on days when it was not.”
All that said, a Halifax volunteers group, seems convinced that using weed can help break the cycle of opioid addiction. The East Coast Cannabis Substitution Program hands out 200 packages of free weed — edibles, flower or capsules — every Monday.
420 Intel is Your Source for Marijuana News
420 Intel Canada is your leading news source for the Canadian cannabis industry. Get the latest updates on Canadian cannabis stocks and developments on how Canada continues to be a major player in the worldwide recreational and medical cannabis industry.
420 Intel Canada is the Canadian Industry news outlet that will keep you updated on how these Canadian developments in recreational and medical marijuana will impact the country and the world. Our commitment is to bring you the most important cannabis news stories from across Canada every day of the week.
Marijuana industry news is a constant endeavor with new developments each day. For marijuana news across the True North, 420 Intel Canada promises to bring you quality, Canadian, cannabis industry news.
You can get 420 Intel news delivered directly to your inbox by signing up for our daily marijuana news, ensuring you’re always kept up to date on the ever-changing cannabis industry. To stay even better informed about marijuana legalization news follow us on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.
Â